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'

Page- S-The Daily Sentinel ·

Tu~~April7, 1987

--Local Briefs:-The annual&lt;_reglstratlon for klndergartPn In ·the Southern
· Local ~khool District will b!' held Friday In the kindergarten
room , next to the Souihern Junior High SchooL
Hours for registering are from 8 to 11 a.m. and from 12:15 to 3
p.m .
.
·'I" .
The immuni z ~ tlon record and the birth rertlflcatE&gt;ofchlldren
~in g entered must be taken to the registration. Immunization
ineludes the DPT series anq booster: polio serif's and booster;
mumps. measlps and Rubella, and the proof or a recent skin
tr st. Children must be• five yea r s oh:J by Sept. 30 to register for
k indC'rga r1 ~ n .

ADC fund.~ distrbuted
STa te Aud itor Thomas E . Ferguson announce the April
dis tri but ion of S64.417,146 In Aid to DependE&gt;nt Children to
6:!5,848 recipients In Ooio's 88 counlles. ,Mel'gs County rece ived
S2Ro.917 for 2,929 recipients.
·
·

Squads answer 4 calL~ for lielp
Meigs Coun ty Emergency Medical Services rE&gt;ports lour ca lls
Monday ; Tuppers Plains at 8: 16a.m. to New Hope Road !or·
Madge Barr to Veterans Memorial HospJJal; Mlddleporl at9: 51
a.m. to Powell Street for John Carson to Holzer Medical Center;
Middleport at 8:28 p,m, to Riverside Apartments for Larry
Hendr ix to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pom eroy at9: 04 p.m .
to l.lnc,o ln Heights for Ruth Po well to Pleasant Valley Hospital.

Thur.~day

The Pomi'I'OY Women's Ag low Fellowship will meet at 7 p.m.
Thursday at the Meigs County Senior C'illzens Center In
Pom&lt;&gt;roy with Sa ndra Longgrear spea king. Reservations arc to
be made by calling 992·3219 or 992·507:!.

R&lt;'vival

.&lt;s('f

at Middleport church

Rev. and Mrs. Michael Blankenship, Pennsylvania. will
co nduct revival services at the United Pentrco&amp;tal Church,
South Third Avrnue, Mlddl!'port. starling Wednesday night and
runnin g through Sunday. Servlc&lt;'s will be at7:30 earh evening
except .Sunday when ser vices will be at 6 p.m. Th e .Public Is
Invit ed .

Supreme Court blocks
suspect's deport~tion ·
WASHINGTON !UP I ) - Karl
Llnnas, accused of co mmanding
n Nazi deat h ca mp during World
War !1 , has won yet another
reprieve from deporta tion to the
Soviet Union wit h a Supreme
Cour t decision to review his case.
The delay of at leas t two weeks
wa s gra nted Monday when Jus·
lice Thu rgood Marshall extended
an emergency stay Issued by a
federal appeals cour t In New
~ork "p~ndl n g fu rt her order of
this ro urt. "
i\llorney Ge neral Edwin
Meese said ear lkt· In I he day that
despite "a co ncer n about Jhe
Soviet system of . j~ s llce," Jhe
Justice Department would move
to enforce Llnnas' cour t·ordered
deportation to the Soviet Union
should the high cour t refuse to
block if.
Meese also said the Jusllre
Department would oppose Lin·
nas' appeal before the high court,
which sources sa id would hear
the case April 17. The Supreme
Cour t Jwlce has r efu sed to
consider II since legal action was
Initiat ed aga inst Llnnas In 1979.
If the appeal fails, Ll nnas
wou ld br Pom&lt;• the first accused
Nazi war crlmln;i l deported to
!he Soviet Union against his will.
Treblinka dealh ca mp guard
Fedor F'edorenko, deported In
December 1984, askPd to be sent
to I he Sov iet Union . HP has been
sentrn!'ed to die, pending appea L
, F'ar lng a 5 p.m . EDT deadline
- wh&lt;'n an emer!lency stay
grun ted by the appeals court in
New York wa s set to expire Llnnas' lawyers, former Allor·
ney General Ramsey Clark and
Lawrence Schilling, asked Mar·

'shall to block the deportation.
Llnnas said the Supreme Court
should grant a stay so It can
consider "whether a deportation
hearing ca n be the bas ts lor the
Uniled States to force a man to
his decreed death In a foreign
country." He also asked the court
to determine whether his 'depor:
talion "would be not only a
disgu ised ex tradition but Is a
mutual and cooperative under·
taking by the United States and
the Sovlel Union."
Meese, who had given Llnnas a
month to find another country
that would take him , said at a
news conference )le would not
block the deportatton.
" There Is no decision," Meese
said . " There Is an order now In
eftect, and It 's a question of then
the approprla te people wit hln the
depar tment enforcing the order
If all the court actlo.ns are
concluded and the stay Is lilt ed. •·
Llnnas, 67, accused of r unning
a concentration camp In Tartu,
Estonia, whrre 12,tro were killed
during World War II, was packed
antl ready Jo board an airliner
bound lor the Soviet Union last
week when he was granted an
emergency stay by the 2nd U.S .
Circuit Court of Appeals.
Llnna s, who the Soviet Union
accused of forc ing camp Inmates
to kneel at the edge of a mass
gra ve and ordering guards to
open lire on them, was convicted
In absentia by thE' Soviets In 1962
and was sentenced to die. Soviet
officials have said they lVIII gtve
h1m a new trial on the war rrlmes
char ges.

Hugh (Doh) Wamsley

a.m.

,

Judgf Don~ld Andrew Cox, who
r uled that the prosecution has
enough evidence to make a case
on the murder charge.
Earlier Monda)(, State Fire
Marshal F'rank· Eisnaugle con·
lfnued . his tesllmony for the
prosecullon.
, Elsnaugle told the jury that
Curley was of sound mind when
he told him that he set the fire. ·
Howev('r. the'prosecutlondld not .
press at that time to determine
whether Curley meant to kill his
mother , though when Prosecutor
Joseph Cain questioned Elsnau·
gle, Elsnaugle said that Curley
told him that " l figured my
mother had fallen down and
caught on fire."
Most o!thetlmethatEisnaug1e
spent on the stand was absorbed
In clarl!lcatlon and rehashing o!
details given ln. his earlier
testimony.
Dlaeu~~IBI procedllre
· The proHCutlon then called
Capt. Carl UngtordollheG~llla
County Sherltf's Department.
Langford, who has sat with the
prosecution trorn the atart ot the
trial, testllled primarily on the
procedures that he took during

Surviving are three sons, Wll·
Ham of Fort Myers , F'la.; D.W.
(Doc) Lawson, Guysville, and
Dorwy Lawson of N~w Marsh·
flel~; ·a daughter, Geraldine
Nicholson, Athens: a sister,
Maxine Edwards, Sa nd Fork,
W.Va .'; 11 gra ndchildren, 23
greaf .gra ndchlldren and one
grea I·grea l·gr,anddaughter. .
Besides his parents, he was
preceded in death by his wife,
Hazel. in 1983, and a brother.
Hayward .
Services wm be at I p.m.
Thursday at the White Funeral
Home in Coolville with M r.
Waller Carney offici aling. Burial
will be in the Asbury Cemetery.
Friends may ca ll at the funeral
home from 3: 30 ·9 p .m.
Wednesday.

Reagan eyes
national issues

.Ohio,. area weather scene

Helen G. Dais
Helen G. Dais, 68, .19515 Kings·
bury Road, Pomeroy, a teacher
In Meigs County for over 40
years. died Monday at the Holz0r
Medical Center ·following an
extended Illness.
Mrs . Dais was born at Bur~
llngham In Meigs County, a
daughter of the late Rodolph 0 .
and Bertha Grim Burson. She
was a 1936 graduate of Shade
High School and a 1949 graduate
of Ohio University. She taught in
the Salisbury Elementary School
and the former Bedford Elemen.
tary School lor 41 years before
her retirement In 1980.

Rea gan was to report to the
C'a binel on the Otl awa summit
and !hen take up the domestic
agenda for the las t 21 months of
his adm inistration. Each Cabinet
member wa s expected to provide
ideas of what the priori! ies will
be, Whit e House spokes man
Marlin Fit zwater said.

William· rCokel Lawson. 90,
Route I, Guysvllle, died Monday
at O'Bieness Memorial Hospita l
lnAthens.
Mr. Lawson was born In
Gilmer County, W.Va .. on June
16, 1896, a son of I he late William
and Flora Lawson. He was a
farmer .

A&lt;l&lt;lrs, 400

l b~

&amp; up ,

$.16 - S:~. !;fl;

Whitewall

· ·•·~~:&lt;

the lnvesllgatlon, such as taking
photographs of the body , ~xamln ·
lng the body. examining the
evidence and the general scene of
the fire, questioning of wllnesses
and/ or suspects. and so forth.
Langford said th at Cur ley was
alert. coherent and "appeared
normal to me." During prelim I·
nary questioning, La ngford said
he did not record the conversa·
lion between Elsnaugle. and
Curley.
·
However. according to Lang·
ford, when Curley Indicated that •
he was going to con l ess to sf'ttlng
the trailer liome on !Ire, Lang·
ford ask~ Curley If he there
would be a problem with record·
lng the confession. When Curley
did. not say that he wanted the
ques Uonlng to end. Langford
recorded the confession . At tbe
time, Curley was not under
arrest, nor was he at any time on

Dec. 21.
'l'be prosection's last witness
was Don Baird or Baird Auto
Parts, Body Shop l Towing.
Kanauga, who testUied that he
towed Curley's truck trom the
Curley residence on Dec. 21 ro his
shop on Ohio 7.
·

BREC crews
By NANCY Y.OACHAM·
Sentinel Stall Writer
Ailhough many Meigs County
customers of B uckeye Rural
Electric Cooperative Inc·. were
still without power at Tuesday
noon, and had been without
power since Sat urday night,
Glenn Sm ith , manager of Buck·
eye Rural' s Gallipolis olflce, was
reluctant to say how soon power
cou ld be restored to all affected
homes.
" The bulk of ou·r customer s

Clear tonight, with a

h&lt;llw~en 30 and 35 . e~::::;~l
Thursday, with highs b
60 and 6~ . The probability
precipitation Is near
through Thursday. Winds
be light and
todavl
and light and variable tonlghlt.l

•

enttne

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26 Cents~

A Multimedia In c. Newspaper

working to restore electricity

should be restored by later this
week," he said, adding that
regionally, power had been res·
tored to about half of their
customers who had sE&gt;rvice Inter·
fupted by the weekend snow
storm.
Smith said that seven addl·
Ilona! work crews were brought
into the area immediately to
assist with · repairs . At noon
Tues day, he r eported that two
morecrews wereonthelrwa y to
the area and ·that repairmen

'

were then ·working In Meigs
County ,
Normally, Buckeye Rural has
l711nemen who operate in crews
of two or more Individuals.
Aboutl: 30 Tuesday afternoon,
Deborah Faw, a Buckeye Rural·
consumer on Sidehlll Road in
Rutland Tow nship, ca lled The
Dally Sentinel IQ report that
power to her home had just been
restored . Faw's electric ity wen t
offal 9 :2~ p . m . Saturday .
This is not the first time Faw

'

has been left wltho ul electrlcil y
during inclement wea ther.
She said her family went
without power for one week last
year due to bad weat her, and the
year before that , were without
electricit y fo r two weeks. ·
A main concern of Bti ckeye
Rura l consumers seems To be
what they feel is "a lack of
correct Information- and some·
limes no Information- !r om the
c ompa ny during pow e r
outages. "

One Meigs County man re·
por ted th at he allowed a freezer
of meat to Tlfaw because he wa s
relyi ng on Infor mation from a
company 'representative that
power would be back on In a short
period of lime.
Ann Kip p, of the Ohio Rural
Electric Coopera tive, Columbu s,
the governing body over Buckeye
Rural. said Mond ay mor ning
that abou t 4,000 consumers were
wllhout power in Buckeye Ru·
ral' s nlnc·rounty area.

•

Buckeye Rural serves parts of
At hens, Meigs, Gallia , VInton;
.Jackson, Lawrence, Slota, Pike
and Ross Co unties Klpp
reported ,
Acco rding to Klpp. 2, :168 miles
of line "all In rural ar~as" must
be maintained by Buckeye Ruraf
and during snows of the typO
exper ienced over the weekend;
the lines may ~ " plagued with·
·
problems."
As &lt;''IPialned by Klpp, non··
tConllnued on Page 10) ·

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·
·

SERVICE - Evelyn Clark, chalrpel'!lon of the MeiJ!S County
Board of Elections, ,Tuesday afternoon presented Mr. and Mrs.
E.A. Wingett, Racine, with a plaque In recognition of their
" ongoing community servlct•" when the board and Its staff staged
an open house at t)lelr new quarters, IOM Mechanic St., Pomeroy.
Bob Wingett was prE&gt;Sented an Identical plaque later In the day.
The Wlngelts are co-owners of the board 's new quarters. Th••
building has been completely remodeled and redeL'Orated to meet
ibe needs of lhe electron board operations. For many years the
board's offices have been located In the Masonic Temple building,
Mulherry Avenue, Pomeroy.
·
'

- Melli'! County Commlaaloner Mannlnlf
Roush received. on behall o! the Melp County Commluloaen, a
plaque from Evelyn Clurk, chulrperMOn of the Melp County Board
of EleclloM, Tuet~day when the hourd and liM Ntaff held an open
house nt their new quarten at !till Mechanle St., PoiJM!I'Oy, The
plaqm• commendk the t'Ommlll8lonel'fl lor onl(olng ~ommuntly
st•rvlct•. Other members oft he board ol eledlonure Norman Will, •
Bill Cozart und Don Collins.

'

Death lends impetus
to vicious. dog bill ·Reagan takes action
.
COLUMBUS (U P! I - Legisla·
'lion to control dangerous and
vicious dogs has been discussed
:in theOhioG ener aiAssembly for
'more than Hl year s. but the
-sponsor of a bill that could
'preven t a!lack s by vicious dogs
'may have pr evented a fatal
afl ack this week in Dayton.
Rep. Robert Hickey , D·
. Da~ton . told the House Civ il and
.Comm ercial Law Com mittee
.Tuesday That the aTtack by two
pll bull trrrier s. on Dr. William
·Eckman, 67, Kcll cr lng, and
.Joella Darmstadter, .12, Da yl on,
may not have happened If his bill
had been in effect.
F:ckman. former chief of
surgery at theVeteransAdmlnis·
!ration Hospita l In Da yton , sui·

fere!\ a fa tal heart atta ck during
owner of the dogs, Wilbur Ru· nipping at his pant le ~ or
tho bloody att ack and died In
tledge, was cUed for falling to growling, anu the mall car r ier
co mplains to authorll les, the dog
surgery two hours later. Darm·
obtain a dog license, but Dayton
stadter, 32, wa s In satisfactory
Pollee
Dan Baker said the cou ld be la~led " dangero us"
condition with Injuries she sui·
aflack Is st ill under Investigatio n when II is registered.
''If the dog went ahead and bit
fered in the allack.
by the homicide unit and more
the mall ca rrier, he cou ld ~
"If the dogs In question had
eh ar~es cou ld be filed .
been found to be previously
Hickey sa id his bill applies to considered vici ous, " Hickey
dangerous, we could have pre·
all dogs. not just pit bull terriers. said .
If labeled dangerous or virl ous
vented the attack,' ' Hickey said.
though they are respon sibl e fo r
"ll's my hope that if anyone had
most of th e 15 dea th s · that -a drclston that would ~m a d e
known those dogs were danger· occurred In th e United Stales last by the dog ward en - the do ~
ous ... something would have year as a result of att acks by .would have to be confined to a
been done.
dogs. acrordlng Jo the Humane ' locked pen, and It s owner would
)lave lo nol lfy aut horlll rs 11 he
" lt 's my ferve nt hoprthat now.
Society of the United Sta tes.
after going through 10 drafts .. .
Hickey sai d th e bill would sells or tr anspor ts the dog, under
we are fair ly close to having a bill define a dog as dangerou s or th e measure. Also, dangerous or
we can go forward with," Hickey
vicious based on lis behavior, not vicious dogs would not be ~I lowed
on a leash longer !hun six feet,
said.
lis br~d .
After Monday' s allark, the ·
He sa id , for example, If a dog accordi ng to thr bill.
harasses a m~ll carrier by

Lt:

Divers seek bodi~s in Wreck of ferry
Z E EBHUGGE, Belgium
, I UPl l - DTvers using arc lamps
searched th rough the night for
bodi es trapped Inside the Brllish
ferry Herald of Fr1'e Enterprise,
which capsized last month, leav·
ing at least 134 people dead or
missing.
The 7,000·ton. 435·fool vessel.
which had bern resting on its side
about a mile out of .zeebrugge
ha r bor. was lifted upright Tues·
dav in an elghl·hour sa lvage
operation but parts of It re·
main cd submerged i n 30 let'l of

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STATE REPS- ,Jane Frymyer, center, director for the Meigs
County Board of Electrons, chats with representatives !rom two
stat~ offi&lt;es at Tu~sday's open house held at 108 Mechanic St.,
Pomeroy, IIi give the public an opportunity to view the modern,
new office facilities of the board of elections. With Frymyer are
left, Michelle ,Jenkins, representing the office of Sherrod Brown,
Ohio Secretary of Stale, and Carolyn Andrews, representing the
office of l)hlo Attorney Gen••rat Anthony Celebrezze. Among the
visitors at Tuesday's open bouse were various county officials and
rt•presenlallves from boards of elections In neighboring counties.
Relr&lt;·s~ments wer e served hy local board employees.

Vt&gt;lt&gt;rans Memorial
Monday Admissions - Ml ·
chelle Brown, Racine: Frederick
Tuttle, Pomeroy .
. . :, .•. ·.
Monday Discharges- Earl W.
Wines Sr., Thomas Crow, John
Hunnell.

6116

, ·Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, April 8. 1987

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P155/BOR 13 $35.50
Pl65/BOR13 38.00
Pl85/BOR13 41.25
P195/7'5Rl4 44.95
P205/75R14 46.00
P215/75R15 50.00
P225/75R 15 53.00
P235/75R 15 55.98

Rutrhf'r

lhf' hm d. nonf'.
Fr r&lt;IN fu lf Saif'S:-. . April 4. Apr! I JR.
F'f'f&lt;C.I rrs. Cows 8: Ca l\'f'S, ~prlnJ?f'rs . Ca 111£'
wlll ix' I'C'l'C' IvN'I Frl duv or rarl v Snru rda v
mornln !:!. Ll vPsiiX'k 'huulin g · avH IIu bl i&gt;.

943
PICK-4

SUNNY

Price

Sow !l, .l JHfMJ Jbs. $40-S4!i: 400.:iltl lb.'\,

J42 -$4 6 . ~ : P l~s b~r

Daily Number

••

ECDNtMIY

Market report

William , t.awl
!lon
.

Ohio Lottery

.CHANGE O~ER
SPECIAL

Returning from Canada Men·
day, Reaj(an aides ack nowl·
edged that "hard ba r~a i THng"
lies ahead to fi nd solu tions to the
acid rain and Arctic sovereignty
problems that have plagued
rela tions between two friendly
neighbor s.

She was a member of Kappa '
Delta PI Sorority, the United
Methodist Church and the Meigs
Count y Farm Bureau. She had
been. a lifelong resident of Red·
OHIO VULEV LIVESTOCK
Murln•t Rt&gt;port for Mart h ~. J9K1
ford Township In Mei gs County
Salr r\lery ~aturd n~ nii : OO p.m.
and attended the Carleton
Trr•nds: Vrul Cai V&lt;'!ol, stradv: F('Nif'r
C';ttt lP. sll':lfl;."; Co ws, slru dy ;. Slrrr's &amp;
Church.
Yl·u rlln gs , mr'&lt;l. fra mf' 1:1 &amp; -1. 2:i41-:IOO lbs.
Surviving are her husband, D . llm~ !92: :rotl~~l'll lOs. $1.1-1"7: ~llii · SI'II Tbs,
Rowland Dais; two brot hers. lfill·Sllt : !'oi'IJ.r.oo lhs. $.1!!·!77: l'ollll·700 Tbs.
S'72. r&gt;J: 71'11·Millbs, I!W·Sffi : Mlll bs &amp; up.
Frank Burson, lkeechobee, F'la.. I"~
'~ 1 - S.~. :'il : lklfrr s. m C'd. fnt m f' 111 &amp; 112.
and Ralph Burson, Pomeroy; 2;().300 lhs. IM·$77: :rotl· ~l'll lbs. $51&lt;·172:
~1'11 ~ 500 lhs, ' 16-IAA: !'oi'IJ.hiJO lbs. I!W'·$05:
and several nieces and nephew s. h00~7TIO
lb.s. .t&gt;;&lt;;.lfil); 71'11·Mil Tbs. ~'&gt;11· ~'\11 ; llOO
Besides her parents, she was lbs &amp; up. S4:H~1 . 50 ; Bull.-., m1'&lt;1 . framl"•l &amp;
preceded In dealh by two broth · '2. 2:;Q&lt;TIIII lbs, SnHAA; :rotl·400 lbs. $.'9·.11'1:
~rx1- rro lhs. $~fi - $77; riOO -fWI lbs, ~55-.,7.1ers, Rex and C'lal t·e Burson.
fllll. 71'111bs. S51·1AA.:;Q: 71'11~RI)(I Ibs. $'&gt;1·.102:
Services will be held at 2 p.m. ~Kl lbs &amp; up. S47-S:'W .50: Hols tf' ln ~l f'rrs &amp;
Bu lls. :'.IKHIOO lbs. S47-S'l11: -Rutr h0r Aulls.
Thursday at Jagers &amp; Sons 1200
lbs &amp; up . ut lllllf's , $4~. ~ - $.'14 : cunn rrs
. Funeral Home, 24 Morris Ave., &amp; cu !INs. :J:I2·S47:' Butchf•r Cows. ut lilt Ir-s,
Athens, with Rev . Alan Black· $4 1 . 50· $~~ : rn nnr rs &amp; r•ul1 f'rs. $.'\fi-$4 2.50: u
ff'W hC'tfC'rr1II' I ypf' cows. up In $M : Lt . W1 .
wood .and Rev. David Curfman )OW gr udf' cows. s:f.!-down : Sprln gf'r C'o"'S.
officiating. Burial will be in Well s S.l.l0-$440: Cow &amp; Ca lf co mb .. $42~·$N !i:
Vf' al Culw•s, r holrf' &amp; primP. $92·$100:
Cemetery . Friends ma y call at ml'd . grudf', .1i 7~ - $~t1 : Aa b,v Cu lvf's, h,v 1hc
·
the funeral home from 2·4 and 7·9 hrad. S ll~ · d o wn .
Top H02"s: 190·2011 Jbs, nonP: 21n.210 lhs.
p.m. Wednesday .
$41 .~·.,H . Ill; 2111·2&lt;
1[1 lbs. S4~J· S4fi: 8u tr•ht'l'

OSHAA .
reclassifie.s
two sports
---Page 4

Two national authorities will
tackle the question, "Star Wars:
Assured Security or Step Toward
Oblivion•" at a free public forum
Wednesday on the Ohio Unlver·
slty campus. .

Services were held at 11
today In !be Henderson Taberna ·
cle tor H11gh J. (Bob! Wamsley,
78, Redmond Ridge, Gallipolis
Perry, W.Va., who died Sunday
In Pleasant Valley Hospital fol·
Dr. Robert Bowman, a former
lowing a long Illness.
of space weapons re·
director
The Rev. Charles Birchfield
search, will challenge the con·
o!tlclated and burial was in
cept,
while Robert Billings ,
Austhi·H&lt;il&gt;e·McCioud C'eme·
former
chief of staff at th e SDI
tery, Gallipolis Ferry . Wilcoxen
public
relations·
agency , Hi gh
Funeral Home, Point Pleasant,
Frontier.
will
speak
in favor of
was In charge of arrangements.
the
system.
Born Nov. 8,1908at Henderson,
The forum is set for 8 p.m. In
W.Va., he was the son of the tare
Roo m 2:!.1 of M drton Hall, at the
Rol)ert W,amsley and Frances
corner
of Stewar t and f\ace
Leport Wamsley. He was a
s t r~t s . in Athen s. Profes sor
r tverman and was sel f·employed
Ronald Cappelletti of th e OU
as a fruit and vegetable
Physics Depa rtment ,will serve
· Dr. Robert Bowman
salesman.
as moderator. The forum Is
Surviving are his wife, Jewell
'co·sponsored by OU's Baker Peace and Justice Network,
Wamsley; seven daughters, Mrs.
Peace Studi es Program, Jhe Educators for Social Responsi·
Virginia Thomas and Mrs. Bon·
University
Program Council, OU bitit y, Pa x Chris !I, the Lutheran
nle Pearson, both of Ga llipolis
Students
for
Pearr. the League of Ca mpus Ministry and five
Ferry, Mrs. Madelyn Chutes.
Women
Voters,
the i\ppalarh ian churches.
Mrs. Marcia Endrizzi and Mrs.
Wanda Ross, ali of Columbus,
· WASHINGTON !UP II - Pros·
Marcelia Bennet1e of Florida and ident Rl•agan. back home from
Mrs. Lois Gartner of Wester· talks with Canadian Prime Mi n·
ville; two sons, Richard of lster Brian Mulroney where he
South Central Ohio
rrly tonight.
Galllpqlls Ferry and Raymond of made slight concessio ns on acid
Varia ble cloudiness tonighr,
Ohio Extended Forecast
Henderson; !our sisters. Eartha · 'ra in and Arctic sovcrdgni Y'. with a low between ~:, and 40.
Thursday th rough Saturday
lee Weirs of Point Pleasan t, tu r ned his all en lion to his domes· Par lly cloudy Wednesday, with
Ge ner ally fair thmugh the
N;~talne Reynolds and Imogene
lie agenda tod ay .
per iod, wit h highs in the 50s
highs near 55.
HuddlE&gt;ston, both of Delaware,
Thursday and in the 60s Friday
The probability of precipila
Ohio, and Oma Sheline of Gallipo·
The president wa s giving a lion is near zNo tonight and
and Salu rda.v. Ov er night low s
lis Perry; two brothers, Robert luncheon for the corpo rate spon· Wednesday.
will range from the mid 30s to the
Wamsley of Point Pl easa nt ~nd sorso flh ecom meniora ti onof t)le
Winds will be light and north·
mid 40s.
Randall Wamsley of Galllpoiis
bi cenIennia I of 1he Cons t it u1ion 'liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
Ferry; an aunt, Sybil Hope of and
planned to hold a Cabinet I ~
Henderson; and 21· grandchild· meeting in The afternoon .
ren and 30 great·gr andchlldrr n.

Curley trial prosecution _~c_o_ntt_nu_ed_fr_om_Pa.:;,;ge...:..l)...:..-._ _ __
Sullivan' s laundry cart In the
motel's laundry room somelfme
between 8: 45 and 9 a.m. Some·
times, she said, customers would
leave their key s with the maids
lnstead.of the front desk.
Crouse said she also saw
Curley holding a brown paper
bag with what she believed to be
a bot tle Inside.
Acquittal rej .,cted
Sulliva n co nfir·med that she
found Cur ley's room key In hrr
laundry cart around 9 a.m.
Dople, who wa s working as
des k clerk at the time, sa id he
nollred Curley leaving the motel
parking lot In his pickup truck
between 8: 45 and 9 a.m. Dople
said he looked up from his paper
work when he heard Curley's
truck st"rl up llecause he was
unsur(' If II was Curley or a new
customer.
Prior to Conley'sopeningstat e.
men! , defense co·counsel Rl·
chard C. Roderick Jr. moved to
have Curley acquitted of the
murder charge agajnst him,
claiming the prosecution had
failed to produce evidence show·
lng Curley SE't the fire.
The motion was dE&gt;nled by

Athens ·f orum
tackles SDI

Area deaths

Kindergarten ·registration Friday

A;.dow·Fdlowship meets

"-

!\'lore · than 500 people were
aboard the car .ferry when II sank
March 6 on a voyage from
Z!'ebrugge lo Dover.
Slxty·one bodies were rero·
vered shortly after th e vessel
wen! down. The snipping line and
Belgian authorities , cUing the
passenger llsi. said another 73
were missing and presumed
drowned ...: trapped in the sub·
merl{ed ferry.
British authorlllcs , however,
have said missing persons r e·
ports Indicate as many as 133

people may . ~ . missing and
!'rapped Inside fhf,' ship.
A Belgian sa lvage ofll cial who,
asked not to be named told
United Press International sa l·
vagers reported they sa w " ~bou t
50" bodies as they worked to
right the vessel.
Belgian ra dio and Dulch telcvi·
sion reported "some .10 &lt;bodies"
were recovered Tuesday night.
Divers, wor kin g in r elays by the
light of arr lamps, continu ed
thei r search for bodies through·
nut the night.

. Seve n British and a . dozen
llel glan divers WPr C in volved In
th e search. Th ey were allowed
Into th e vessel aft er toxicologists
condu cted a survey and deter·
mined It wa s sa fe for th em to
enter.
Sal vage ex per ts had fea red
chemical tank tr ucks aboani The
ca r ferry ma y ha ve spBicd wh en
the vessel ca psized , fillin g the
hold with potenlfally deadl y
mater ia ls. Bul. after Jhc survey,
l;lfcy gave searchers tlic go·
ahead.

\Vat er.

on embassy security

WASHINGTON 1UP I 1 President Reagan docs not
wan t to derail arms ta lks wllh
the Soviets rven though Rus·
sian spying has forced hjm to
block eilhCJ' nation from mov ·
ing Into new embassies and
ultimatel y co uld fo rce him Jo
destroy thr U.S. compound In
Moscow .
Reagan , announcing his de·
ctsloti to keep the embass)es
vac ant for now and to appoint
two commiss ions to review
emba ssy securily wor ldwide,
sai d s pyi n ~ " Is employ&lt;'d by
t"veryone" and Is no reason
not to do bu sines s wilh the
Kr!'miin .
The reasonin g comes as
Secr eta ry of State George
Shu li z prepares for thrct' day s
of talks in Moscow~cxt week
with Soviet Foreign Minister
Edu ard Shcv ardnadzc. Rca·
ga n said Tuesda y there is no
reaso n to aller those plans , but
the admini stration con firmed
extraordinary securily pre·
ca ullons for the visit.
National securit y adviser
Frank Carlucci told reporter s
that despll c the deep security
breach that prom pted a tor·
mal U.S. protest to th&lt;' Krcm·
lin Tu esda y, th ere wi ll be a

secure room In thc~ current "
emba ssy and a trailer from
wh ich Shultz ca n communi·.
cute with Washington without ;
fear of Soviet eavesdro ppln~ .
Reagan, mov ing to address ,
the escala tin g ; ex·and ·spy
scandal l n vo lv l n ~ M ar ine : ·
guards at the most sensitive
u.S. diplomatic post, went .·
per sonally to th e While Hou se , ,
p!'css room to announce:
- T he United SJJ!Ies will not ·
move into It s new emba ssy In
Moscow. a SJIJO million facility
appa cn!ly riddled with clec·
Ironic bugging dev ices built
Into lis slr~c turc by Soviet
workers, "u nt)l I ca n ~
asfo urcd that II Is sa fe."
-Likewise, lhe Sovl~t Un·
ion will not hi' a llow~d to
occupy Its new facility on a
Washington hillt op, a prime .
toea non for elcr tronlr s pytn~.
" until a sim ultaneous movr
by both coun tries is possible."
~ Former De fense Serl'r·
tary Melvin La ird will head a
probr Into thP sO&lt;'uri Ty fai l·
urcs at th e C'UT'T'r nt cmba.ssy.
where two Marines. alicgcdlr
after scxu"i pl oys by a Ru.s. .
sian woman . allowed Sov l~ l
spies to pukP around lhl'
facility .

.

Jury finds Gallia man guilty of m~rder,, aggravated arson
GALLIPOLIS A seven·
woman, five· man jury dellber·
ated for it'ss than four hours
Tuesday in Gallia Count y Com·
mon Pl ea,s Court In fl nd ln~:
William Oliver Curley gulily on
murder and aggraval ed arson
·
charges.
Judgt' Donald Andrew Cos
Immediat ely pronounced sent·
ence and handed I he Curley the
maximum penalties : five to 25
years in prison for murder and
10.25 years behind bars on
aggravated arson, boih Jerms·to
be served co nsecutivel y.
The maximum was req uested
by the prosecution. Cox said the
court was concE&gt;r ned about Cur·
ley's attitude during the tri al as
well as an apparent lack of
remorse on Curley's part and fek
he should not be allowed to walk
free.

" I don't !eel the defendant trial. Roderick said Jhe ver dict
should be on tht' street where he .will be appea l ~ and Curley wa s
ca n menace somebody else," placed on 5200,000 ~ppeal bond.
Cox sai d. '
The jury went tl!!hind closed
Curley, 64. Rt. 4, Gallipolis. doors at4 : 28 p.m., had a dinner
shook his hea!t as the senl ences break and returned the verdict at
were read. When asked by Cox If ·s:15 p.m.
he had anything to say, Curley,
Ear.ller In the day , Curl ey
through ·defense co·cou nsel Rl · testified for the defense.
chard C. Roderick Jr., repli ed
Curley declared the testimony
that he had said everything he of those witnesses clai ming that
wanted to say In his testimony for he physically abused his mother,
the defense earlier In the da y.
Noldle Edith Curley, to be lies. " I
C'urley was Indicted on both didn't lay a hand on her," Curley
charges In connection with the said In response to that testlm·
Dec. 21, 1986 fire that swept ony, which was recalled to him
through th&lt;:,rear ot the Kemper by Assistant Prosecutor Brent
Hollow Road mobile borne he Saunders.
shared with his mother, Noldle
Curley said that his mother
E. Curley. Mrs. Curley, 81, died never accused him of hlttlrig her,
of smoke Inhalation and thermal . though he said she would someburns In the fire.
times accuse him of misplacing
Cox denied motions by Roder· things In the house. Later, sh
tck for acquittal and for a new would !orget the whole matter.·

Curley sa id Th at he had prob·
lems with ,hls relat ives . Concern·
lng th e tes timony of Eliza beth
Bellamy, Mrs. Curley's sister· in·
l aw; Ger trude Lemons. Mrs .
Curley 's younger si ster ; and the
threats th ey said he made about
somehow ha ving his mother out
of the picture. Curley said, " I'm
not saying Jhey' re lyi ng. That' s
their conscience."
As coun sel di scu ssed wher e
Curley was between 5 a.m. and 9
a.m. on Dec . 21. 1988. the date of
the trailer fire, Curley claimed .
that t'he smell of gasoline on his
person , said to be strong by th-e
desk clerk on duty at th e Econo
Lodge Morel on U.S. 35. was
traceable to ·the fact that h ~ was
loading a two·gallon gasoline can
In the bed of His green 1969
Chevrolet pickup !ruck.
Curley said that II wa s.some·

limes diffi cult to loa d a gasoli ne Ta ckett , a Joan offi cer at Ohiu
ca n Int o a tru ck and not get some Valley Bank . wen•saldbyC'ur ll',l '
on one' s cloth es, shoes or hands,
to be somdhlng he didn' t know ,
es peci ally if one Is doing so a(
about.
.
night wllh one hand holding a
" Her bu sin&lt;'ss was hrr busl· ·
flashlight.
· ness. and m.r bu siness Is my .
Saunder s ·apparently put a bu siness," wa s his respons&lt;' to :
great deal of stress on one major
Jjal Inquiry .
.
poi nt conce r ning Curley as Cur·
ne of lhl' objec tives of lh&lt;• ;
Icy appeared at the scene of th e p osecution, us II had been ·
tire on that Sunda y morning. lhroughoul lhc· trial, was to show :
Curley' s alleged comment. " Je· that Curli:'y's financial situation ;
sus Christ! I can prove where T wa s one of the motives for his •
was," wa s a focal poi nt o! allegedly setting lire lo his homt' ;
Saunders' s allack.
) and murder ing his mother.
~
Saunder s, In his closing argu·
Curley said that money was ·
mcntto the jury, urged 1\ IO''u se transfcr~cd from his account fo ;
your common sense. How many hers. Sau nders trl~ .to~howthat ;
people say 'I ca n prove where I such tra nsfer of funds would. In ,
was' alter they see their mother his words, " keep . him from :
Is dead wit hout admitting gull lin spending s:mto $50 on the lonery ··
some wayT'
each day ," whit·h Curley denied. ~
Discussion of t he join! ac·
Doroth y Walker, a cashier at '
counts, as attested · to by Pat
(Con tinued on Page JOt
~

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:COmment·

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P~~g&amp;:-2..,..ni8 Daily .Sentinel

Pomeroy-c-MiddleP0!1, Ohio
Wadnuday. April 8, 1987

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The Daily Sentinel '

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111 COurt street
. Pomeroy, Oblo

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DEVOTED TO THE INTEREBT!I OF THE MEIG8-MASON .UEA

~lb
1Slm19

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r"TL.~._.,...,~=·""'

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publbher

•• PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH
General Muapr

: Alelllaql Publisher/Controller

A ME;MBER o!The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
: Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Aasoclatlon.

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LETI'ERS OF OPINJON i.re welroroo . They Jfto.dd be lets than DJ wordJ
• lonl. All letters Iff!' JUbject tOed ltlRI and JTI,III bf! I lined With name, 1ddre11 and
• telephone number. No u111lgnBI letters will be ~·bUshed . Leiters .should be In
· ~ good lasre, addreulng luues, not persooalltles.

If debate over the federal
highway bill did anything else, It
confirmed the fact that many
lawmaken ·believe pork barrel
polltl~s Is back In fashion ..
These unabashed . spenders
treated President Reagan like a
bat! sport when he_vetoed their
handiwork. Mter all, they'd
slipped a little something for
everyone Into their bill: a 65 mph
speed limit lor Southerners and
Westerners, big subsidies of
mass transit far urban lawmak·
.ers .and liberals; and scores of
"demonstration projects" tpork
barrel of low. priority- even
among highway officials) for

powerful legislators frOI!l every steadily risen - even as slmUar
region.
costs lor autos and planes shrink.
So give Reagan credit. His veto
Reagan Is right: Recent mass
helped expose ·again the ·myth transtt.1budgets have been Jar too
that · federal spending has been generQ.llS. Amorig other things,
cut to the bone. In-transportation they've permitted many cities ·to
programs, the fat remains whale plan or begin to construc~costly
blubber-thick.
·"
commuter rail systems they
Consider national policy to- . would never pursue II tliley had to
ward mass transit. In the past 24 · pay tor the projeets themselves.
years, Wpslllngton has poured
In dense cities like New York,
nearly $50 billion Into commuter trains are admittedly vital. But
trains and buses, yet the percen- In low-density cities- which Is to
tage of workday rides taken on say In all but two or three places
them has never stopped ·· -commuter rail Is pure folly .'
declining. '
From Miami to Buffalo, rider·
Meanwhile, the cost' per pas- ship on new train systems has
senger mile on mass transit has been cruelly disappointing.

..

~The Lighter Side

~What rhymes. with
~ super tycoon?
By DICK WEST

,

&gt; WASHINGTON tUPli -I never saw a megamogul. I hope one day

•Co
see one. But here's one thing I needn't mull: I'd rather be than see
•

.qne.

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;. And that goes for tyroons and magnates, too, although I suppose
·(hey would h'il&gt;.\e to be super-tycoons and super-magnates to compete
:~lth megamoguls.
; Megamogulls a term I, ah, plcke4 up In a book about mogub,. All
·three - moguls, tycoons and magnates - are Important and
:1nnuent1al people. However, there are differences.
:; For one thing. a mogul is the dominant person In a particular field,
.presumably exercising dominion over both tycoons and magnates.
; • For another. I never heard of a mega tycoon or a megamagnate.
·there may be such t hlngs but nobody has yet written a book about
;(hem.
; ' I assume megatycoons and megamanates, as well as mega moguls,
·would he regarded as celebrities, which makes a magazine article
:that came to my •attentlon even more pertinent.
; . It tells how to play "Celebrity Pick Up" and "gives tips to men on
•&amp;ow to ptrk up women." Although the author, Carole Mallory, Is a
:~oman and concedes that "my experience has been from the female
;P&lt;'rspectlve," she contends that "many or my skills are
•transferable." And I'll not argue that point.
:• Most of the celebrities she rlalms to have picked up, however, were
;ictors or at hiNes. I'm wondering If what the world needs now Is an
•6rllcle offettng pointers on pkklng up moguls, lycoons and
•
.magnates.
; : All hough you have never have seen, much less picked up, a female
•!nogul. tycoon or magnate, I'm sure most of the art is Jransferable.
;. For exampll', Mallory, whose conquests allegedly Include Warren
;Beatty, Rod Stewart, Reggie _Jackson and Tile Nastase, advises
•balnst boas ting about "former lovers."
;. If she's not boasting about claiming to have picked up Warren
;Beatty,! don't recognize a braggart when I meet one, and I havpspent
11 lot of lime among both Texans and politicians.
~· Anyway, I'm sure the actress-model's advice can be amended to:
·~'Don't brag about former moguls, ty.coons and magnates."
;: As vegetarians associated with this year's "Great American
;Meat-Out" probably can attest, It's not difficult to persua·dr people to
;say no to broccoli.
•. But. I should think saying no to moguls. tycoons and magnates
;would be almost as difficult as saying no to actress-models.
.•: Personally, I wouldn't know from llrst·hand experience, having
;never been picked up by a stalk of broccoli. But then, I haven' t had to
·~om pose too many negative res poses to acless·models either.
;. : I ml'an, II may be fairly easy lor a actress-model to pick up a star
;athelte. But plrklm~ up a mogul. tycoon or magnate Is another

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&lt; Today Is Wednesday, AprilS, the98thdayol1987wlth267 Iolollow.
;. The moon Is moving toward Its full phase.
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus, Jupiter and Saturn.
:; ThE' evening star Is Mars.
·
; Those born on this date are under the sign ol Aries. They Include
;Lewis Morris. a slgnt&gt;r of the Declaration of Independence, In 1726;
•pioneer neurosurgeon Harvey Cushing In 1869; film star Mary
:Pickford In 1893: Olympic figure skater· Sonja Henle In 1912; former
:11rst lady Betty Ford In 1918(age 691 : actor and former ambassador
·Co Mexico John Gavin In 1928 t age 59) : choreographer Michael
:~nnelt i"A Chorus Line") In 1943 (ageH l: actor and country singer
•J'ohn Schneider In 1954 1age 3.1),' and rock musician Julian Lennon In
•196Jiage241 .
·
•
• ••
;. On this date In history:
,• In 1513, Ponce De Leon or Spain landed at whalls now St. Augustine,
rfla., to seatch for the "Fountain of Youth ."
.
'• In 1917, Austria and Hungary, allies of Germany, severed
~lplomallc relations with thE' United States.
'• In 1949. 3-year-old Kathy Fiscus of San Marino. Calif., fell Into an
:lbandoned well. Rescue effort~ attracted nallonal attPnllon. Her
~y was round two days later. ·
!• In 1952, Presldl'nl Harry Truman ordered government seizure of
'Ole steel Industry to avoid a general strike.
•; •
:: A thought for the day: Lewis ¥orris, told he might spare his
~roperty by refusing ro sign the Declaration of Independence. said,
.~There arP many homes, only one country. "

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"Death threats, extortion, adultery, hush money, take-over plotsLucille, you've got to swear off these TV preachers a~ get back to
some decent soaps."

~eeping

1

Meanwhile, operating deficits
have mounted ominously - to'
the point that Washlngton;s
Metro subway could f;1ce annual
red Ink of a billion dollars bY 1990,
And for what? Rail does not
significantly ease a11to conges·
lion In low-density cities. It does
not nOticeably diminish poilu·
Uon. It does not even save much
energy.
_
Take congestion. "·Rail transit
has never led to less congestion·
because II promotes denser development, which generates
added traffic," says Kenneth
Orskl, a former senior official In
the Urban Mass Transit
Admll)lslration.
Andrew Hamer, a transporta ·
lion scholar with the World Bank,
argues that rail does little but
help "preserve and enhance
proP&lt;'rly values In downtown
areas. And II clearly allows
downtown to attract workers."
fn other words, It concentrates
commercial activity. Whether
that Is always a good thing IS
another matter.
None of this means rilles
should negleet mass transit. If
nothing else, they have a responsibility to their poor and elderly:
For cost-effective service,
though, most cities should stick
with buses.
"Among the various forms of
·mass transportation, the urban
bus Is most likely to earn an
operating profit, whereas suburban bus, rail transit and commu. ter railroad are the least likely to
do so," wrote Jose Gomez-Ibanez
and John Meyer tn their book
"Autos, Transit and ClUes." .
For one thing, buses aren't tied
to permanent routes, so they can
directly serve changing reslde~­
tlal patterns rather than the
dated priorities of transit

Malaysia healthy_A_nd_er_wn_d&amp;_s.~gn_B~_·l('_v;_an_A_tta_

WASHINGTON -If's not often
that a general practitioner becomes the political leader of his
country, but Dr. Ma.hathlr Mo·
hamad, the 61-year-old prime
minister of Malaysia, Is con·
vlnred his medical background
was good preparatiqn for his
current job.
"Training as a doctor Is
extremely relevant," he told
Dale VanAtta In Kuala Lampur
recently. "I like the approach of
a doctor. First you get the history
from the patient, then you do a
physical examination and then
you make a diagnosis and
prescribe.
"I try to apply the same
principles to running the country
- you know, ask a lot of
questions, find out what It's all
about, make my diagnosis and
then decide on the treatment.
And once you decidE' on the
treatment, you've got to keep on
pushing. Because If you keep
changing your mlnq. you're not
going to do your patient any
good."

Mallathlr said most people
refer to him by his medical
rather than his political title, and
he likes It that way . "I prefer lo
be called 'Doctor,"' he said,
explaining with a grin : "That's

something I earned."
To become prime minister, he
pointed out, "I happened to be In
the right place and two people
died. And then I was chosen.
That's all."
The doctor-politician was be·
Ing too modest. It's true·that one
prime minister died In office and
his successor became Ill and
resigned, leaving the post to his
deputy, Mallathlr. But he, has .
since won two landslide eleetlons, In 1982 and 1986. He also
happens to be the first Malaysian
prime minister of the former
British colony.who Is not from an
aristocratic family and educated
In Brlt;iln.
In fact, Mahathlr could hardly
be considered an "Insider," or
even a proper member ol the
Establishment. His own party
once expelled 111m from Us ranks.
He first book was banned In the
1970s - and stayed banned until
July 16. 1981, the day he became
prime minister.
Later this month, Mahathlr
faces another challenge from his
party UMNO, the United Malays
National Organization . The Inter·
nal vote on party leadership
constitutes the first such chal·
lenge to an elected prime minis·
fer In the 30 years or Malaysia 's

IndependencE'.
But Mahathlr has survived
many challenges since he was
born the youngest of a school·
teacher's 10 children. "I had to
light for everything I got," he
said. "Whether It was tn the
family, or In the school lor
elsPwhere l , It has been one long,
continuous light."
Young Mahathlr's education In ·
a colonial, English-language
school was Interrupted by the
stunning Japanese victory and
occupation In early 1942. "There
were brutalities ," Mahathlr recalled. "We know that they Hhe
Japanese military pollee) killed
people. These things happen. Of
course, If you came across a
Japanese sentry and did tbe
wrong thing, they might sla11 you.
But I wasn't slapped."
After World War II, Mahathlr
went to medical school In Slnga·
pore, where the young Muslim
had difficulty In adjusting to the
presence of women In his classes.
"I havp always been very shy
of ladles," he-confessed. "I think
I stutter and lose my conlldence.
l came from a world where there
were no girls In the school. And
then I went to college and there
were girls In the same class ... It
took me some lime to get

adjusted."
,
Eventually, Mahathlr adjusted
well enough to marry one of the
women who had been In med
school with him: Dr. Sill Has·
mah. (They ttave seven children,
three of them adopted.)
A general practitioner from
1954 to 1974, Mahatlllr treasures
the memory of the lives he saved
by surgery under sometimes
primitive conditions. He became
a political activist In the early
1960s and, following the violent
race riots of 1969, he wrote an
Impassioned book, "The Malay
Dilemma ."
The book demanded economic
equality for the native Malays;
this angered the Chinese third of
the nation, which controlled most
of the wealth. His views angered
the party leaders, who kicked
Mahathlr out of the party and
banned the book.
Mahatlllr's political crusade
bedside manner hasn't always
been soothing, as he readily
acknowledged. "There Is a need
to be frank In polities," he said.
"But, of course, when you are
frank you are going to stl&gt;p on
many toes. If it hurts - well,
people say a lot of things that hurt
me, too. I take It; I expect them to
take it."

We Rese~e Th~ Right To
Limit Quantities ••

. STORE'HOURS
·. 'Mon.-Sat. 8 AM-10 PM
Sunday 10 AM ~ lQ PM

.
298 SECOND _ST.
POMER9Y, OH.
E THRU SAT., APR!L ·11, 1987
'

SIGN UP FOR
A CHANCE
TO WIN:

•

1¥

There . are those who say
protest Is dead among the pres·
ent generation of young people.
tThese are the same those who
believe they were the first to
protes) behavior that contradicted the ethics they learned In
Sunday school, confirmation
elass, Hebrew school - ethics
they thought their elders merely
gave Up service to. They are also
the same those who said they'd
never demean future genera·
lions by saying, "In my day ... " )
A glance through dally newspapers lately has to tell them
they're wrong. There are young
people all over the country who
are responding to an Injustice
happening far lrom their sale
world of parents who made sure.
their children had more than
they had when they were growing
up. These children are respondIng not to a war that threatens to
take their lives, not to Injustices
that make America the privilege
of one race. They are responding
to something happening across
the world from them In South
Africa, to people they most likely
will never meet.
They are the young people
building "shanty towns" all over
American eampuses to protest
apartheid. Some of .them have
gone to jail for their beliefs. One
of them Is former President
Carter's daughter , Amy.
Another Is- a former student of
mine, a nice kid that everyone ·
liked when he was a seventh
grader at Ozark Middle School In
Ozark. Mo .. In 1974.
·
When I saw his name In an
· Associated Prest ·story aboUt
apartheid protest at IM Unlver·

slty of Missouri-Columbia. I
called him to ask what In the
devil was going on. His answer
was pretty simple: He and a
group ol other students had been
following politics avidly since
they were freshmen . They took
speclallnterestln Cl'ntral Amerl·
ran and South Africa, and
considered It their duty to protest
actions t)ley considered Illegal or
Immoral. They lbhor the Unlver·
slty of Missouri's financial hold·
lngs In companlcs linked to South
Mrtca.
I asked him whereheplckedup
his soc.lalconsctence. Min~ came
from spending summers In the
South, seeing dual Jines every
place there were nice things to
have like. bathrooms . dr_lnktng
fountains and Dairy Queens: one
line for whiles, one lor "coloreds." No. he didn't come by
his social conscience 'like l did
mine. He didn't have to be
slapped In the face with It, to lace
friends who couldn't go the
places I could .
''My father always discussed
Ibose things with us," he told me.
" Dad was always Interested In
politics and always told us about
what was going on In the world. I
just came by II naturally.';
He arranged for me to talk to
other students active In apar·
thetdm prolesis. They told me of
taking "non-vlolmt resistance"
training from someone wh~ had
been active In the civil rights
movl'ment under Mart!n Luther
King. They were ready to go to
jail for what they believed,
although IIIey wondered practl:
cally how their actions would
affect their "permanent re-

cords.' ' the same accountings
that scared us back In the 1900s.
"We want to havt:' careers, to be
able to lead on," one student said.
"We wondered what this tjall·
lng) would do to that ."
One of these students told me,
"It's not that your generation
doesn ' t care anymore. People

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The torch is passed --:-.__ ____s_ar_oh_O_v_('r_.'}t_re_e,

'

history
.::;~:Today Byin
United Press International

Help Uc ·
-Ce le br·ate
The 13th
Annivercary
· of Powell'•
Super ~ala

To ·b oost transit, .c ut pork_....:..-__vl_·nc_en_,_co_rro_u

get tired . They start having
families and building careers
and they want to hand the torch to
the new generation."
Watch the wire servlces ..After
a short recess so we could all
catch our breath, the new genera·
lion·Is taking up the challengP.

DAIRY LANE

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'

.

�Page~4- The

Wednesday, April 8, 1987

Daily Sentinel .

Pomeroy- MiddlePort. Ohio

Terry Francona smash in.Cincinnati ·debut Opening Day

'

Changes are ew for area ·teams ·in 1987 reclassification

Only fi Ve of 2.1 area tea ms In
thrl'€ high sc hoo l leagues {Southcastern. Tri -Val ley and Sout h· ern Valley t wil l ·be changing
r lassiflral ion during the 1987-llS
sc hool year according to Ohio
High Sc hool Ath letic 1\ssoc;tatlon
li gures released earl ier this
week .
Althoug h sc hools will maintain
thei r assignmmt to one of the
three classes tA, AI\ or AA!I t
cumpf'litiun in boys and' gir ls
IJ&lt;JSkPt ball will be in one of four
di vis ions, beginning with the
111 ~1 - 81'&lt; sc hol!l yea r. Wres tling
wi ll be in lhrel' di visions.
In add ition, foo tball compellliOn will be In five di vis ions, as In
n·&lt;·rnl years. The breakdown by
divbi ons for foot ball have not
h&lt;'(• n announ ced for next yl'ar.
Sc~ w· aJr l'iasslfirations are
maintai ned for boys and girls
!'ompelil lon at the schools based
on the enro llment in grades 9
through 11 Ihe prevfous Oc tober.

If a sc hool does not ha ve ninth · Jackson, boys (bolh Class AAAI,
grade as pari of tht&gt; high school, Miller and ,Oak Hill boys 1both

the figure Is esllrrtalt'd, based on
elghlh grade lolals.
The Changes
Warren Loca l of !he SEO/IL
will be relurnlng to /11\A In both
boys and girls competition this
fall after dropping to Class Ail
during the current school year.
fn olher changes . the Athens
gi rls will be relu r ning to C la~s
AAA a fl pr being ,\A this year;
th{' Jackson girls will jump from
AA to AAA; Federal Hocking's
boys, whi ch have been AA In the
pas t two years, will drop down to
Class A; a nd Trimble's boys will
be retu rning to Class A after
jumpi ng to Class AA t his year.
In seven other cases, tea ms '
will remain the s ame as !hey
were this year after changing
betwee n th e 1985-86 and 1986-87
sc hool years.
They a re the Gallipolis a nd

.down js: Division J -- 409·1262;
Division II- 243-408; Divl~ioillll
l34-40~ and Division JV Class AA) arid Galli polis, Fed.
'
.
18-133.
eral Hocking a nd TFimble girls
In the So utheastern Ohio DlsI Class AA L
Beginnin g with the current lr icl. bO¥S baskelb"ll next winter
school year (based on October, will ~oak like this:
•
1985 enrollmenl) , C'lassiflcal ion
Division I
Chillicothe, Lancas ter, Loga n
was bas!!(( on stud ents in grades
·
9-11. Prior to '!hat, the cia,) siflca - a nd Marietta.
Division II
tlon had been based on students
Athens. Ga llipolis, Greenfleld1
in grades 10·12.
.
Hillsboto, · Ironton , .Jackson:
New Breakdown Given
New breakdown totals fo r Meigs, Miami Trace, New Lex·
inglon, Portsmouth West, Port sbasket !Jail are: Divis ion I · 427·1.391; Division II - 251-426; mouth,. Rock HUt. Sherldap,
Division Ul - 146-250 and Div· Sou th Point, Vinton County,
Warren Local, Washingt on CH
lslon IV. - 25-145.
The girls basketball break- and Waverly,

Dlvisi!ln 111 ·
Adena, Alexander. Belpre,
South Webster, Chesapeake,
Coal Grove, Fairland. Federal
Hocking, Huntington; Lucasville
Valley, Manchester, Miller. Minford. Nelsonvlll€'- York, North
Adams, · Northwes t, Oak Hill,
Palnl \!a lley, Peebles. P iketon,
Southeastern , Trimble, · U nloto ~
Wellston, Wes t Union, Wheelersburg and Zane Trace.
'
Division IV
Port smoulh Clay. Crooksville,
Port smouth . Ea s t, Ea s tern
Beaver, Eastern Reedsvllle,
Fairfield, Glenwood !'&lt;ew Boston,
Green, H;moan Trace, Ironton
St. Joe, Kyger Creek, Lynchburg

'Norman among 1987
Masters favorites
AUGUSTA, Ga . iUPi t - AusGreg Norman, among a
han dfu l uf fon•ig n golfers w ho
&lt;hare lh!' favorit e's ro le al this
wc&lt;•k's Ma sters, says II would bC'
" mistake 10 totally di scount
dl'frn d lng c ha mplon Jack
Nir klau s.
" I rC'memb&lt;'r reading In lltC'
paper last ymr that the ' Bear'
was in hihrr nallon," sa id Norman, who lied for srcond behind
Nlr klaus In 19Rfi a ftrr bogeyi ng
IIi&lt;' final hole. "Now he's 100-to-1
and he's sti ll capable of wi nn ing
l rali;~n

ugtJ i n.

"A I 11111-to-1. II wou ldn 't be a
IJad bl'ilo pu t a ft•w shillings on."
Nicklau s ag rces although
golf\ ·'·Golde n R&lt;'a t " is now 47
and appea rs Infrequen tly on ih&lt;'
pro go lf lour.
" I don' 1 have· much des ire to
piny the tour tou rna ments, but
tha t doesn't mcan I want lo

The Victory• Circle

retire," sa id Nickla us, who has
won six Masters titles. "By
pacing myself, I ca n st ill get
r ea d y for I he major
c hampionships.
Nickla us says he has a differe nt altltudc than he had going
into las t year's Mas lers.
"Last yl.'a r, it had ix'en six
yea rs si nce I had won a major
championship and I ca me" in
fru s trated." said Nickl a us.
" Winnin g he Mas ters changed
thai. This year. I'm relaxed, not
concer ned about how I play. If I
do. well th is week, great. If I
don't, I'll be disappointed, but II
won't be lhc end of Ihe wor ld ."
Norman . who won las t year's
British Open and fini shed second
in the PGA Championsh ip, feels
differen tly. He fell he gave away
last year's Mas ters a nd Is anxIous to make ame nds for the
clos ing bogey that Jell him a
stro ke bchln,d Nic kl a us.

The Daily Sentinel- Page- S

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, April 8, 1987

CINCINNA1J tUPI1 -Terry
Fra:ncpna, who had a promising
cari'E'r spoiled by two knee
operations. is starling a new
ca rt'E'r with the Ci ncinnati Reds_
Francona entered the new year
without a team, but by Opening
Day he was Cincinnati's starting
first baseman. The Montreal
\ Expos releast'd the gifted left·
handed hit ter · last April afler
fe ll -che could not rema in

Clay, North Gallla. Portsmouth
Notre Dame·, Southeyn, Southwestern, Symmes Valley, Western
and Whiteoak.
Gil'ls Breakdown
Girls cage teams In Division I
this winter will be Chllllcolhe,
Lancaster, Logan and Mar ietta.
· Division II are11 teams include
(SEO, . SVAC and TVC listed
only ) At hens, Gallipolis, Jackson, Meigs, Vinlon County,
Warren Local and Wellston.
Division Ill area teams for
g irls baSketba ll include Alexander, Belpre, Federal H()('klng,
Nelsonville-York. Oak Hill and
Trimble.
Division IV are Eastern, Hannan Trace, Kyger Creek, North
Ga llla, Southwestern, Soulhern
and ,Symmes Valley.
'
Wr~stllng
. Wrestling will be In three
divisions. Breakdown for tha t is
Division J, 415 and over; Di vis ion
. II, 230-414 and Division Ill , 23~
and under.
Log~n and Marietta of lhC'
SEOAL will be Division I In
wrestling. Gallipolis, Athens,
.Jackson and Warren of the
SEOAL will be Division II, along
with Meigs , Nelsonville-York
and Vinton County of the TVC.
Federal Hocking and Trimble
of the TVC will be Division III In
wrestling n~xt year.

heallhy and Francona came
back to haunt his old team by
hittin g a home run In the Reds'
11-5 victory over the Expos
Monday .
"It' s not a revenge !actor at
all, " Francona .sa id of his lworun homer that highlighted a
nine-run fo urth Inning for the ·
Reds . "When you have a lol of
friends - ·and.l slill have a lot of
close friends -on that 1eam- you

want to show !hem you can· still
play.
" It was a Ut.tle bit gratifying."
When the Reds Invited Franrona to . spring Iraining, they
were counting on his line· drive,
spray-hitting abilities, certainly
nol his power.
Entering Mond ay's ga me,
Francona had hit on ly nine home
runs In 1,075 cart'E'r at- bats, and
he never has hit more than three

in a season , a leal he arcom p- that they would lei Itlm ' know
whether he made the roster byllshe&lt;l In 1983.
'·
"Wh~ n you hit one or two a
March 25.
year. 'you're flying around· the
" Pele (Rosel and 1 ta lked
bases, " Francona said. "And . about him and we cer tainly
when you get ba('k toAiie dug9ut, considered II a darn. good gamyou Wonder If you even did it."
ble," Reds General Ma nager Bill
This past winter, l"rancona led Bergesch said. "There was no
the Vene;zuelan League In hit- question of his hitting and de
ling, prompting the Reds to fense. We had to prove to
Invite him Jo spring !raining. ourselves !hal the kn ees would
They did so with the stipulation hold up . He showed he could do

it."

...... 3
.. ,..., .
' •

,.
...

.~

F·rancona, who turns 28 Apr11
22. had opera tions on bolh knejl~
within two years, a nd tJo l1
Inj uries came In lhe mlddl~ !ll
out standin g seasons. In 1982, 1\~
was hlft lng .321 on J une 16, but' he
ca ugh t his sp1kes in the warning
track a t Busch Siildium In ~t ,
Louis. He needed surgery on N~
right kneP and was through for
1he season.
'
' "

Mor·e Saving~ During Kroger's 2nd. Week Of

,,

COPYRIGHT t987 -THE KROGER CO. ITEMS AND
PRICES GOOD WEDNESDA Y, APRIL 8,
THROUG.H.SATURDAY, APRIL tt , t98J , IN
POilROY AlfO GAlliPOliS STOlES

WE RESERVE THE RIGHTTO LIMIT QUANTITIES.
NONE SOLD TO DEALERS .
ITfM

~VERTISED
POLICY
Each ol theN ~iMd i1ema il requirtd to bt r111ditv 1111ileble lor
"~in nth Kroger Stort.IKctPIIIII)IC:iflcal'( nottd in th is ad. 11 we
do run out a t an adllenlud illm, we w~l offer you yaur choice at a
comparable item , when tvtillble, JellectW!g the same u~lng• or •
rain check which w ilentitlt you to pur chaM tht 1av.rtised item at the
adv.rtiMd p lct within XI tilt't'l , Onlv one vendor couPOn wKI be
ICCIPted POl' 111m purtt\l.ed.

---

•31 ~ PI&lt;E-RUIWEST
- BMGAJN IIATtNEES SATURDAY I
SLWDAY • ALL SEATS IZ.SO
ADMISSION EYERY ~SDAY 12.10

L~

\'

THURSDAY!~_j

APRIL 3 tlvu I

FRIDAY

tl!N

•

FROZEN

Salisbury Elementary Girls Basketball Team
1986-87 Second Place Championship. First .row,
(lelt to right), Christy Grogg, Misty Powell ,
Andrea J essie. Second row , (left lo right) ,
Elizabeth Downie, J!;mlly J~hnso n , Carrie Bar-

IN OIL OR WATER CHUNK LIGHT

.Fox De Luxe
Pizzas

leis, Cassie Hubbard. Third row, (left to right),
Mindy F1ndiay, Misty Hayman, Melissa Clifford,
Yvette Young,' Courtney Midkiff.· Fourlh Row ,
(left to right), Wesley· Young, Assistant Coach:
Dave Kennedy, Coach.
!

" APRIL IN PARIS "
IN THE DEll -PASTRY SHOPP E

Fresh Baked
French Bread

Chicken Of The
Sea Tuna

9-oz.

15-oz. Loaf

6.5-oz.

The First Week in April...
By Scott Wolle
Note: t\s a high sc hool literal urc teacher I proudly suhmlt the
following poem, written by one of
t\merlca's most famous poets:
t\ nonymous. t\ lthough much
• Indy and research has been
do~e. It· Is not known when
Anonymous wus born, nor when

he died (nor .If he still exists).
This work was believed .to have
ht•en written over one hundred
years ago, but could have taken
tllace In today 's world. It Is quite
approprlatll!)
"Twas the First Week In t\prll"
Twas lhc firs t week In April,
I should have been glad;
But wouldn' t you know II ,
The wea tlwr was badl
Marc h wen! out like" lion,
CamC' In like u lamb;
For man~ around us had
slarlc·d their tans!
Basrb&lt;~ ll had alrrady siHrtecl ,
Area lea ms doing qu ltr well ;
The weal her h;~d once cn·
(lp{lf:II C•d.

and our tbaseball l fi eld look&lt;'d
swelL
Butlhf' n It turned ba d...
No ga me played on Mond ay,
nor Tursday as well:
Th t• llfc of a ba seball coac h
sun• can be H... theck! l
Wr pln ~r d one (gam(• ) on
W('dnr s da~~ .

II most

day;
· We thought wt• cou ld win.
mlser;~ble

So. wt• playf'd anyway!

We shuddl'rrd and shlvrred as
Ihe cold wi nd blow;
Hoping "''' 'd win, But wishin g
WP wt•rr through.
· Wr dld t1' 1 pla _v bad. bul could
have done bcllrr :
As Ihc mucl on our fret grew
wet ter and wrttcr.

I tore open lhe shullers and
threw open the sas h,
{And wouldn't you know~
The moon cas! a glow on -the
new fa llen snow!
The snow came, I hen II stayed,
a
Blizzard lor sure,
II lighte ned and thundered,
then snowed some more.
Then, It turned worse ...
As the snow continued coming
down,
II mad'!:' It very dlfflcul t to get
Int o town!
AI 9:58, Sal urqay, Meigs Co. an
emergency did declare;
As snow made II dlfflculi to gel
a nywhere.
Now thalli's mostly over, with
a sigh of relief or despair.
We pray for som e sunli ghl ,
while we dry ou t out hair.
If April broughl snow showers,
Are we sure we ' re ready for
May ?
Whateve r thr case. Throw oul
the basebal ls;
We're ready 10 pla y!
Yes. Twas lhe llrst week In
April.
Good weat her we st ill seck.
Thanks to old Mot hN Na ture,
April Fools Day (Las ted over
24 hours\ ;
ta ndl. Bcaame April Fools
Week!
Anonymous ...
I must sa~ !hill I cert ain ly
ag rec with anonymous: Play
Ba ll ! How a bout those RE DL.EGS! I hope Ihi s Is the year
for another championship! Oh
well, until next time I' ll see you In
the victory circle.
-

Wr practirrd Inside with lillie
g;lin :

Then· the forrt·as l cal led for
more Aprl I showrrs;

And Y('S, yr' the~ ca me In the
form O[ snow ~hOW('J'S!
Hours Hnd hours; yes hours of
~ now ;

I couldn 't br lirvr ill
Not In wint er. but In April and
\. ' baseball seaso n. wouldn' t you
know! ..
Snowballs replaced base balls,
Yes. Sliders we threw;
'Spillers and leers, out pitch
selec tion grew;
Scoop ups wit h shovels. and
er rors were few;
Sliding was abundant, '
· Who would have dreamed, Ihal
in April you could have done It ?
We lraded our gloves and our
ca ps,
For mittens and toboggans;
Out ,went the spikes and In
came the gou lashes.
Wh ile sleeping Friday night, I
suddenly awoke,
·
·
Hopi ng this nightmare was
nothing more than a joke.
• !

0

For

GAS~

Ml'mbN : Unlt t•d Prf'Ss lnt rr nat lonal.
Inland Dll ll y Press t\ ssocltu ion Rnd t hf'
Ohi o Nt•wspapPr A.~sociat ton . Nationa l
AdV('rll!tlnJ~; Rf'prt'sf'nuu tvf' . Bran ham
Nf'"·spilpf'r Sal t'!~.. 73.1 Third i\\'(IMUf'.
Nf'w Yllrk. Nf'W York 10011.

POSTht:A.'f'J'ER : S.:nd addrf'SS &lt;"hM~
to Ttlf' Dally Srnlinf'l. 111 Court St •
Pomf'f'oy, Ohio 45769.
SUBSCRJI'TtON RATFS

1)1 Carrlff or Molm" RouM!
Ono We&lt;'k .................... ,.............. 11. ~
Ont' Month .................... ..... ........ $5.• !'1
Onr Ycar ... ................ ..... .. ..... .. S65.CitJ
SINGLE COP\'

PRICE
'[)e.lly ..................
... .

. 2~ Cen15

WHOLE KERNEL OR
CREAM STYLE

QUARTERS

Kraft Parkay
Margarine

Kroger
Corn

1-lb.

I

16.~17-oz.

Charmin
Bath Tissue
4-Roll

••

00

For

For

,U.S. GRADE A HOLLY FARMS

•

'

Split Chicken
Breast............:......

Round White
Potatoes.............

lb.

%\ Gat.

•

•

Mike Callahan, Heeling Dealer

combined with the fact that gas costs are
going down, means It costs less to stay
comfortable. To us, gas heat has all the
advantages. For warmth and savings, gas
is the best choice:'

"In 15 years as a heating dealer,
people have come to count on my company for good advice about heating. And
almost always, what they want and what
we recommend are the same ... a depen·
dable new gas furnace. Gas has always
been the . most popular choice, mainly
because of its warmth. And today, people
also like the ·fact that a high-efficiency
gas furnace will save them money. The
new designs conserve gas ... and that,

'

8
rc~ Cr::!

... . . . . . . . . ,. . . . . . . . -

%-Gal.

Kroger .
·
Cottage Cheese ....................... 24-oz.

89
25
89c
89C

------

Pound

c

For your home, too, a new high·

LIMIT 4 PLEASE

efficiency gas fumace. can mean a
comfort and Slllings dlffer&amp;nce. Ask
Mille Callahan ...or a helitlng dealer
in your 11188.

Subscribers not d cslrln~ 1o pay the r-or·
rll'r may remit In advanre dlrPCf to
Th£' Dally Scn!ll\£'1 on a 3, 6 or 12 month
busts. Credit will be gtvPn carriPr each
week. ,

10-lb.

20-LB. BAG t2.89-60-LB. BAG t6.9!!

----------~~======~======--~
U.S. GRADE A
C
.. ~~=n::1ju~h~l·l·~-~........... ............
Holly Farms
Whole Fryers
' ~~~eCB~~d· .. ·.......... :.............. 16- oz~
C

Pu bl l~ llfd

q •rry ufl f'rnoon . MondB v
,lhrou,gh F'rlday. lll ourl SL . PI).
mrro,\'. Oh io. by the Ohio Vall('y Pul).
H~hlun Co mpA n~· Mu l!tmC'rlla, l nr..
Poml'ro.v. Ohio 4~71&gt;9. Ph . 992·2156. &amp;-C'Ond das" pos t:IJ! I' paid at Pomt'roy.
Ohi o.

For

For

PEOPLE WANT

t usrs 14 ~HG J
1\ ll! \'~lon ol Multln;tedll'. In c.

10 dcfrat.

to r:1ln.

WE

The Daily Sentinel

When II W&lt;lsovt•rwcwr.nt down

- Then vowed Ihen and there
never ag;1ln lo be bcal(en).
· Bull hen illurned worse ...
All da ,l' on Thursda)' 11 startcd

"THE·HEATING
ANDTHE.DNE
ARE TilE

INDIVIDUALLY WRAPPED SLICES

~h:~~ Food ..........................,.

I

12·oz.

NON RETURNABLE BOTTLE •

~:ItKDrinks ...............................

No substrlptlons b;r nfall pcrmhled In
areus wh£&gt;re homl:' carrie-r Sl'fVIC(' Is

available.

99c
9'c
·

4'

/

2·Ltr.

REGULAR OR UNSAL TEO

Mall S1hlcrlptlo•
Jneklt: Melp to•NJ
'
13 Week&gt; ....... ,..... ........... _......... 117.29
26 Weeks ....... .... .. .. .. ............ ..... $34.116
~2 Weeks .. , .... ..................... ...... I". !WI
Ollloldo Molp Countr
13 Weeks .............................. : ... 118.!10

'

Krouer
.
1-lb.
Saltines .................................. . Box

-·

COLUMBIA GAS

'

.

26 Weeks ......... ,,,, ........... .......... 135.10
~2

WeH&lt;s .................................. l67.!0

.

-

;;

)

l

.,

•

,

I

,

'

�')

....J

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

Wednesday, APril 8, 1987

Mets_shad~. ·Pirates; Astros, · Giants win
Major~S

r 10 illnlnK!' l

Oklnd 100 I':II Ullllll- I ;, n
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"''"' \'r k :1410 000 OOx- :r -; :!
l' alll· r ~un , FI.~IN ·r r;L S mlln ill! .tnd
llrth.; Ujt·da. Oru"'ll pq and fu rt N .
" - Ujt•du I I lll . 1.- Pallt·hnn (Il- l /.
1111 - ...-,.,_, \' .. rk, Slrl.IWIIt'rr.l' 'l l / .

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L..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _;,:;._ _.....J

the Opening .Day sta rt er and
wen t seven Innings, a Ilow ing ] ()
h' l b 1
]
I s u on Y one r un. Ojeda.
raised his ca r eer record to ~- n
ag8 ins1 the Pirates. He .,.,:n"fil·
ut" \.10d from three doubl e play s.
J
0
. h
• ess('
fO SC'O pJtc ed two innings
for t hC' save. Bob Pa tlerson took

Vinson ace picks
11-

Racl. ng starts Apri·I 18
·

T h~ l~ R7 Ruc ing Season begi ns
April 1H ul· Skyline Speedway In
Stewart. Ohio wilh lhr STARS
l.a le Moul'l r ules. Hobbv Stocks
and Sltw l Stock wllh . Sky line
ru les.

The racing ar t Jon will con i lnuC'

every Saturda y. nighl with lop
drivers In lh•· arPa compellnr:
wl lh lop pursc;s: Lair Models
$800 to win , Hobby Stocks- $250
and Slret•l Stock- $100.
T t1 is VPar m akPs 1hr sixth vC'ar

for pro mote r . Darn•! Willie al
Skyline Speedway . Darrel h"'
re.ccived two awards In Ihe pa st
lwo years for his promolions. In
1985 he w'" chose n Ihe Promoter
of lhe Yr a r ancl In 1986 he was
presrnlrrl &lt;~n award for hav ing
Ihe Mosl Imp roved Track of lhr
yea r .
MHny

ru ·w

a!tra c tion s

a nd

improv(' mC'nts ha v0 bPC' n addPd

for lh e f&lt;1 ns' r&lt;1 cing enjoyment.
Nt•w li ght s have brr n lnsla ll rri ,

I

Local howling
~'II~'EIW\' UOWI.INn I.ANF;!oi
fo. a rl,\· \\ t•dnr ... tl u~· Mlxt•d I Ral(l w

Ma rdt Ill,

l!t~7

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I' OMEHO\' IIOWI .IN(; 1..\Nf:;.' \
t':rll'l~· \\'l'llllt'!'ltlay l\ll xl'd
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· .In l ll' ti ,IP\ . •,·ti; IJI. •Irh il' l'hrlps. !;()\ ; llH ;It
• CA ME · I.Mt'\' llu g: m, 1!19; Dt• bl llr ns iC'\'

:mn: 2nd 111t. 11 C: J\ ME: ,/,tr k B;whm·1·•

' D.mn." \V III 1!1:1: C. lt'ol\'n Rar tuwr tflel·'
' TE AM SI-:U ti-:S &amp; CAME· M l ctllit·~N.'I
l.undr l'f11om . 2HI!l, 11 ~~"

· Grarlc· ~(·hool Jllayt&gt;r~S
honorPcl wil h hanquc•l
Ha cin e R oy~1l s fifth and sixth
gr"dc' b&lt;~ s krlbuli &lt;~nd football
plii.\' l' rs nnd r hrl1 1'leaders wf'rr
hb n o rc• (l l'r(' C ntl~ · nl a banquel HI

Snullll'rll .lunior High School.
Till' junior hi gh gy mnasium
w a s . ci t'&lt;'Or&lt;~ l f'fi in the Roya.ls ' r·ed
:11111 " hil &lt;' colors. and approxlrna tc·t.\' 17:1 prop t,, wrrr in at tC'nd·
Clll fP at

Ow

In the ·spotlight:
By Cindy S. Oliveri
County Extension Acnt
Home Economics llid 4-H
It often seems· ·that . many
approaches to hou~~ehold money
management assume that everyone has a rPgular paychPck.
Howi'Ver, II you don't have a
regular IncomE&gt;, you have Jots ot
company. Sali'Spersons on commission, servers refylng on Ups,
substitute teachers, . farmers,
and self-employed people, are
just sol)'le of the people whose
income flow Is, ai!Past, partially
trrpgutar. NonP of them can

Beat of the Bend

WITH FLOWERS .

Transa(•tions

By BOB HOEFLICH
S!!hlinel Staff Writer
Why do I fl\f'l lhat
school
graduati'S of re·
cent years don't
have the same
nostalgle feeling
lowards their
,al rna maters as
· those of other
generations?
Perhaps, It's because I've
encountered the problems lhal
are arising In getting a Meigs
High School Alumni Association
.:ott the grou(ld.
There must be almosl 4,000
graduates of Meigs High since
1968 and yet only atiout nine oF 10
propte manage to show an
Interest In attending meetings
for lhe formation of lhe new
group. Surely, ~.990 didn't move
·
from the area.
However, the faithful few are
_ forging rlghl along In getting a
reunion sel up lor Ihis summerand are hoping lo see enthusiasm
of others blossom.
•
The reunion will be In the form
of a dance at Meigs High· School
tentatively set for June 27. If you
·have graduates of Meigs High
since 196811vtn~ oulslde thP area
would you please send th.ls
column along to thPm so they'll
know that something Is happenIng. Who knows? They mtghl
even want to come baek lo a
reunion sometime.
A big problem In forming the
association Is lhat there are no
operating funds Ia speak of. II
would be nice 10 send everyone a
leller . You don't really have lobe
· a mathematician, to !tgurP out
thai about 4,IJOO.I€11ers ai221'Pnts
caeh JHISiage alone, hesldes all of
lhe work Involved. amounts to
big bucks.
,
To plan even a dance wlih no
frills will also cost big bucks.
There · musl be Insurance pur·
ehased-- and this will cost about
$250- the cost of a band, security
and janitorial costs must 'be
considered.
So herp Is thP plan. The reunion
dance will be held on June27 and
cost Is S5 In advance and S7· per
person at the t;loor. The new
group needs al least 130 alumni
members kicking ln their money
so that plans can move ahead.
You can make reservation by
sending your money to the Meigs
High Alumni Association, P .O.
Box 25, Middleport, Ohio 4.5760.
By the way, the group working
so hard at getting the association
of! the ground Is meeting weekly
at Main Street Pizza In Pomeroy,
ea~h Tuesday at 7: They more
than welcome your presence.
There's much ro be done and
many hands make light work.
Officers are Bob Werry, presl·
dent; Jami'S Birchfield, vice
president; Jan Holter Davis,
secretary , and Shelly Mankin
Wood, treasurer.
Now. are we going to see some
good old fashioned school spirit
go to work - or what?

Dale Amyx. a \'ar sity assistant
at Looan
Hi gh School tho
past
n
~-

seven years, has been select'ed
h Ch' r .
1 e ' 1e t atn s head foot ball
roach.
A
h
rnyx , a t ree year let terma n

ou al Ohio Un iversil y before joining

Ihe LHS slaff, who chose from a
fl eld of .45randidales.
The new Ch ieftain mentor
currently serves as head yar isty
wrestling coach, and will ·suceeed Clarence Perry. who rosigned earlier Ihi s year Ia accepl
a posl al Wilmington High School
near Cinci nn ati.
Amyx is a gra du ate of Grovepori Madison High School and
receiv es ills BS degree in hea llh
and phys ical educl ion from OU In
19SII.

HUNTI NGTON. W.Va. ( UPII
- Two-lime all -sta te bu skelball
pla)w Sea n Jarkson of Huntin gadditi onal clay ha s been added lo lon Vinson pla nned to sign a
Ihe Ira ck lo Increase Ihe speed of lellcr-of-inlen l wil h Ohio Univcrlhe cars and new guard ra lls sily loday .
have bcPn added. Also, nt'W
The li-foot .Jackson who aver fencing has been put up around ar;rd 2:1.6 points fo r Vinson is
Ihe pits an d parking areas . The cx pecll'd lo b&lt;• sw il ehrd 10 point
llekct boolh ha_s been reloc-ated In guard by lh&lt;· Mid- America n
order IO move the !raffle more Con ference lea rn .
effl clenll y. Weigh scales have
Jackson. also an all-sla lr basebeen purchased and arc bei ng sel bu ll ou lf icldcr, went unbea1en in
up to weigh each car in order lo buskcl ball unl il falling by one r-::::::::...___ ~.:=:::::::::::::::==:;:==:;;:==============~~~~~~
e nha nce lhe compel il lo n. Gas poi nt 10 Whe~ling Central in lhc
and Alcohol pumps arc currr nlly Clas s AI\ stale tournament fi OPEN MON.-FRI. t O·Y
··
being Installed .
na ls. Jackson also was all -s tale
SAT.
10·9; SUN; 12-6
An added fea ture I his year will as a junior when he led Ihe Wayne
br lhe printing of progra ms fof
Counl y school to Ihe Class A siale
special even ts a nd ads are being crow n.
cu rrc nll y laken al lhls lime. If
.IHckson srorrd 1, 704 points in
SALI SYARTS WED., APRIL I,
Interested In purchasing a n ad, fou r seasons a t Vinson.
ENDS SAT., APRIL 11, 1917
please conl acl Da rrel Willie
(614 1 662-41ll or Herman Staats
with H&amp;L Com munlcallons 1304)
86.1-8930.
Another added feature this
year Is the $10.000.00 polnl fund
whic h wi ll pay bark one lhrough
10 In each division. Also. In
addlllon IO lhe l'Unnln g of lhe
above mentioned cars , Micro
Mini Sprint s will race a1 Skyline
Speedway beginning on Sa turday
Our Reg. 5.97
night · May 2nd.
·
The General Ad miss ion Ga tes
will open al 5 PM. Warm Ups are
a l 6: 30PM. Time Trials al 7:00
PM and Raci ng beginning al
8:00PM . Adult Adm ission is $7.00
"1 Qrade Dormant Polled Role •lish
- Chlldrrn , with lhelr parent s
Dormont polled rose bustr In assorted vor·
anri under the age of 10. arp
letles and colors. For lovely and colorful
admlll ed free - Pil passes arc
gardens
and yards. Shop now for saving'$11 .00.
Don't forge t the "Greates t
Show On Dlrl " for your Saturday
n lgh l rn l c rl al nm e nl . Re ·mrmbcr. " When You Hea r II,
You ' re Ncar . II. " Be al Sky llnP
•
Sprl'dway on Apr il 18t h for ai l the
VETERAN Rod Littlefield
raeing ar llon for Laic Models .
u former Southern huskethali
Hobbies and St reel Stock.
player averaged 9.3 points per
Elgh l speci al shows are on lap
game ''" a junior for the
for Ihe 1987 Raci ng Season. Thev
Wltten~ e rg Tigers this winter:·
urc:
·
Utllefield was the Tigers'
May 9. Deicer lnvilalional
starting !Hiint guard. Earlier
$1000 for lale models.
this year, he was named
May 13, Hobby Stock ln vilahonorahl e mention Ah llonal $600 for hobbies.
Acudemlc In thp Ohio Athletic
May 24, St reet Stoc k lnvllaConfer ence. A business manll ona l $300' for strE'!'Is.
agement major, Littlefield Is
J une 27, Mid·Season.
tht• son and Daniel and Shirley
18.88
J ul y 11. Mark Balzano MPmorLllllefl eld, Rt. I, North nroad·
12·15""-'-c~Yews
Dwarl lumlng 8111h
Japanese Hally
lal $1000 for late models.
11·Lb. • Fertilizer
way . Wittenberg finished
Assorted
Yews
In
gJ.
1~·24" dwarf burning
Aug. l. Adam~ Memor ia l $2000
Beautiful hotly In
third In the Division 111
1&lt;-Gro• lawn fertilizer
obe. upright, spreadfor laic models.
bush. Brilliant red far
Gallon container.
playoffs this year, losing to
with
27-3-3 formula.
,, ers. 12·15" size.
colorful yards.
Aug. 2~. Season Champions hip.
eventual champion North
SAVE .
Feeds 5,000 sq. tt.
Sept. 19, Harvest 50 $2000 for
Park, 75-70, In the semifinal
late models.
game.

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7.88-~~7 7.88~~;7

a

1257our 4.97?.:

A number of months ago, the
Ebersbach Hardware Slore tn
Pomeroy unfortunately closed

P\ '(' rt l.

Dur ing lill' ba nq uet. coac hes
and advisors presented trophies
and r ertiflral cs from lhe com·
munll y lo all boys and girls who
par ticlpalrd In the school' s
spon s programs . The children
were also prcst'nted glfls from
;lhe coaehes :rn? ad visors. Each
.coarh and adv1sor was given a
plaque and pre cnr too. including
coaches Howle Caldwell and Bill
Hensler, from Southern High.
lmedl alcly following the basketball sea son, the children were
Jrealed to a bowli ng parly and
pizza par i)'.
In addition lo the coaches and
player·s. Ra cine PTO credlls
ch eerleader~. parents, grand·
parents and comm unity leaders
for lhe successful seasons experienced by the basketball and
football teams.
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Speiltl of the 11e.ek

64C

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67

1

~Aita ·

hlullt
40-Lb.. OlgWllc Peat
Moisture preseiVIng
peat lor tawru, gardens and lhrubl.

....

"At tlli W ef ... P-nty ln1w lrklle
1.1'0MEIIOY, 011. .
PH. 992-2556 .

-~

o_ o+ - ~••••o

6.97~~ 1.77~~ 6.57~;
Nadadtoeelull. 2·Qal. watamg can

# 1 grade patented

polled roae bush In
OIIOt'led varleltet.

Sturdy ploltic 2· gal
watering can In aslOlled colors. 5&lt;MI.

~Um

Altrocttve Grecian urn
In ahell White and
Slone.
. SeMI!

185 UPPER RIVER ROAD. GALLIPOLIS

•

prl'dlct their futurE&gt; · Income valuP of Income for the nex t few
amount or pattern quill' as · monlhs as well as the higher
accur~tely as the person with thE'
flgure and then plan basic
regular paycheek.
spendtn~ In relation lo t~e lower
Having a flexible Income tit- flgurP . If . you end up with
creases the need for having a addlllonallncome. some of II ca n
realistic and workable plan fo r be used for "extra s" heyond the
both your Income and your basics.
exJX'IIses. This week. " In The
Secondly, keep careful records
Spotlight" takes a look at ways to of Income and spending. You
manage a flexible Income. .
must•know where your money Is
First, underestimate future golng should you need to sudIncome -It's a pleasant surprise denly reduce spending If your
lo have more lncomp than you Income changes mar~ 1han you
expected. It may be helpful to expeeted. Those with flexibl e
estimate the lowest possible Incomes have a greater need lo
be careful spenders and record
keepers than people who can rely
on a regular paycheek.
People with flexibl e Incomes

Its doors - too bad, It was such a.
landmark.
The building has now been
purchased by the Arthur Neases
and houses the Fabric Shop.
At the time thai Ebersbach
Hardware dosed Its door, history
on tHe business was a llltle
skimpy. However, from the col·
lectlon of Edison Hobsletter
Ihere dow comes more Information on the business.
It was In 1923 that the Ebersbaeh interests took over Ihe slock
and real estate of lhe Skinner
Hardware Store. The sale In·
eluded lhe large, three-slory
building on· West Main Street,
whlrh had bet&gt;n buill In 1887
especially for a hardware store.
The Skinner Hardware Co .. at
the time of the sale, was operated
by Ben Skinner and George · P .
Daniels and had Ql'en doing
business on MaIn Streel lor
nearly 50 years. For many years
the late Capt. B.M. Skinner wa s
head of the concern. Later the
management fell lnlo lhc hand s
ot Ihe !ale R.P . Skinner and then
was operated by Ben Skinner, a
son of the original proprlelor,
and to George Daniels. a son-In·
law .
At the time ol the sale to lhe
Ebersbachs, It was Indicated
lhat Will Stivers, who had long
been connected with Skinner
Hardware, would stay on the job
and that Ben Skinner would
return to being a' farmer .
Then In 1926, Edward Ebersb·
aeh closed a deal for lhe
purchase o! the B.F. Biggs Co.
Hardware Store, also on West
Main Street.
The late Mr. Ebersbach, according to a newspaper clipping
at the time, Indicated that he
would turn over ' the hardware
st()('k to the Ebersbach Hardware Store and the Biggs build·
tng would be dismantled with a
new two-story brick building to
be constructed. The lower !loor
was to be used by the Pomeroy
Motor Co.
According to the newspaper
report, the B.F . Biggs Co., which
was originally established by
B.F . Biggs more than 50 years
before that 1926 date of sale, was
a well-known establishment and
one of the landmarks of the town.
The clipping noted also that Mr.
Blggs ,had lhe only undertaking
establishment In Pomeroy ·cor
many years.
In observance of National
Library Week, which ends April
11, a balloon launch will be held
at 2 p.m. Saturday at · the
Middleport Library . Chlldrt'll
are Invited to visit both the
Middleport and Pomeroy Ltbrar·
les to complete cards which will
be dispatched with lhe balloons
on Saturday. The cards should be
filled out In advance, however.
Isn't It amazing how we can
fervently pray for help when we
have a personal problem and
when It 's solved, forget to send up
a simple "thanks." Think abou I
It and do keep smiling.

also havt' a greatt'r need lor an
emergency fund to cove~ uex peeled financial obligations. This ·
means avoiding the temptation
to spend to Ihe limit of current
Income since somethln!( from
each pay period needs to be "set
aside" for unexpected !Pan
limes, financial emergencies,
.and Irregular ·expenses. This Is
easter said than done but devel oping lhe "saving habit" Is one
!hat's valuable to develop and
practice. Some financial ad vis·
ers suggest limiting spending lo .
80-85 percenl of current Income
leaving 15-20 percent to "set
aside" for a 'financial reserve,
unexpected expenses, etc. You
need to establish a manageable

a nd realistic amount lor vour
household but al leas t some
reservt' should be better lhan
none al all.
Also, carPfully review pay·
menl dales of your future fixed
expenses (rent , lnsuranceprem l·
urns, elc. I and other major bills
in lerms of w~en Income Is
expected. Try 10 schedule major
payments when you expect lo
havt' high Income. This slralegy,
combined with keepin g some
financial reserves, should make
II easier to pay bills and ol her
obligations on time.
Involve family . nwmbers In
selling financial goals for the .
housPhold. People usually feel
more commitment and willing-

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1987

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Rutland Township Is being
hlghiiRhled In April by Meigs
County's Blcentt'llnlal Commission and Saturday afternoon a
program with emphasis on colon·
Ia I IIfe will be held at the Rutland
Clvlr Center.
At 1 p.m. the Muzzleloaders
Club wll give~ a p~tatlon on
primitive weapons and the 111e of
their hunting teclmiQues uaed In
colonial Ute. They will be attired
In authetltlr period costuming
and will have an I exteulvedlsplay · f artlfacta !rom tha't
rime.
AIIO planned by the MuzzleJoadft'lls a simulated camp site
with 111e men to be Joined by
w~f. Ia period costumlq
doing activities relatlnl to that
linle.

At 2 p.m. Janet Bolin of
Rutland, president of the Ohio
AsiOillatlon of Garden Clubll, will
give,. talk and demonstration on
·gardening and floral di'Sign of
the colonial period. She will be
discussing types of plants grown
at that time. and the techniques
uaed, and de1110111trate several
floral deltgu popular 200 yfars
ago. Ia addition to telling about
plaalland arrangement dellans
popular In the Ohio Valley area
then, Mn. Bolin wUI also dlscuss ·
what the colonllts were doing ln
the more settled areas of Colonial
WlUiamaburg.
.
1'bl! PJ'IIII'Im II free and OpeD
to aU area resldota. Parents are
encouraged to bring their child·
1ft lor a living history leiiOD.
l.

.

ness lo coopera te in efforts they :
,haw helped to plan . Keep coni! ;
muni ca tlon ope n so family !
members can better support •
eac h olh~r and work together :
even If there are lea n financial :
limes or fulure finances ' are •
: ;
unpredictable. ·
Did You Know. Thai : Accord· •
lng 10 Census Bureau. surveys,' •'
rellrees In lhe U.S. recleve lhelt :
lneomt' from lour major sources·: ~­
about 40 pereenl from Social
Securlly; about 15 percenl from 1
pensions: about 19 percent from I
ea rnings and 22 percent !rom :
assets . The rest · (4 pereenl) ;
comes from public ass istance. •
family transfers. e1c.
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Community calendar/area happenings

mURSDAY

CHESTER - The regular
meellng of Shade River Lodge
453, Chester, will be held Thursday, 8 p.m., wilh work in lhP
master mason degree.
ROCK SPRINGS - Rock
Springs Grange will meet 7: .10
p.m. Thursday wilh Palty
Parker, bicentennial chairman,
speaking. The slale baking conles t w,lll also be held.
RACINE - Southern Band
Boosters will meet Thursday.
7:30p.m., in the high school band
room. All band parents lnvlled.
FRIDAY
POMEROY - Return Jona·
lhan Meigs Chapter of the
Daughters of Ihe American Revolullon will meel Friday, 1:.10
p.m.. at the Mei gs County
museum.

RACINE - Rev. Char les Norris of 'Racine will be Ihe evangellsl lor revival services through
April 12 al MI. He rmon Unlled
Brethren Church, In lhe Texas
Community, 7:30p.m.: spedal
singing.
POMEROY - An Easter bazaar will be held al Kro~er ' s ,
Friday and Saturday. by lh e
Missionary Sociely of lhe Flrsl
Church of God, Syracuse.
ATHENS- Ohio Nurses ' Asso·
elation board of dlreclors meel
Thursday and Friday In Athens.
Business meetings, dean 's conterence room Grosvenor Hall al
Ohio Unlversily and all di strict
members are welcome. Receplion al Ohio Universit y Inn 7 p.m.
Thursday.

SILVER RIDGE - Unily
Singers will prPsenl a musical
program at the South Bethel New
Testament Church, Silver Ridge ,
al 7 p.m. Friday .
POMEROY- Pomeroy Senior
Ci tizens Square Dance Club Is
sponsoring a dance Friday ntghl,
8 lo 11 p.m., wllh music by the
Ohio River Bend Boys. Admls·
slon $1.50; children under 12 free.
Bring snacks for snack Iable.

POMEROY - The Gabriel
Quarlel will be singing al the •
First Church of Ihe Nazaren e, al
the corner of Mulberry and Union
Avenues, Pomeroy, Sunday
morning with servlees 10 starl at
9:30 a.m., Pas lor Thomas G.
McClung announces.

·:

Meeting changed
MARIETTA - Due 10 t.~e
cancellallon o! Saturday's meel·•
lng of lhe Cataract SupJl(irl;
Group, sponsored by Jam_es li:.;
Hoy, M.D., Ihe group will me~t•
Aprllll. 1 p.m., al Hoy's effie~.;
326 Front Sl, Marlelta.
. :
The meetings are open 10 the:
public and anyonP. wllh qucsllons·
aboul ealaracts or ca lara~ t:
surgery arP eneouraged 10'
attend.
,
For more Information. calf
37H046 or 1-000-458·4R09 , In Ohio,'
or 1-Bil0·4f&gt;8-4810, out 91slale . : :

Show rC&gt;&lt;cheduled
POMEROY . - The Meigs
County Ja ycee magi~ show
which wa s cancellc&lt;d Saturday
due
to the snow .slor m ha s been
SATURDAY
rescheduled
tor 7 p.m . on April IS
BALD KNOB - A hymn sing
al
the
Meigs
.Junior High Sc hool
will he held al 7: 30p.m. Saturday
al the Freedom Gospel Mission- . In Mlddleporl.
ary Church, Bald Knob and
Sllversvllle Road, featuring lhe
Weekend rev lv ul
Sheklnah Singers.
HARTFORD, W.Va . - A wcr·
kend
meeting will be·held al the
CHESTER- The Chester girls
Church of Chris! In Christian
softball sign up will be Sa lurd ay
from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the Girl Union at Hartford, W. Va., with
Seoul Hall In Chesler. Regtslra - A. B. Maloy of Wellston. Ohio as
speaker. Services will he al 7
tlon lee Is $12 and girls are lobe 10
evening and singers will
each
through 1~ .
Include The Gloryland Believers
on April 10;, lhe Faith Valley
POMEROY- Special services
Singers
on Aprllll . and Ihe New
al lhe Pomeroy Senior Citizens
Life
Singers
on Aprll12.
Cenler al 7 p.m . Salurday wllh
Herherl Inscoe. evangelist.
Meelln~ chrlnKed
POMEROY - Melj&lt;s Count y
LANGSVILLE - Slar Grange
will meet at 8 p.m. Saturday al Board of 'Education's April 14
th e hall and on Saturday, April tneeflng has been changed to •
18, Ihe gran;;ll will have an open April 13. 7 p.m.. al lh e boar·d
·
meeting with a polluck dinner at office.
6:30p.m. At 7:30p.m . Mmemher·
ship presenlallons lor 25 and over Fish dinner
years will he made.
HARRISONVILLE - A Ca p·
fain D's !Ish dinner will be he ld
STJVERSVILLE- Th ree one- Sunday at Scipio Township fire
half hou r mo•les, Jesus' Trial, Stallon wllh serving from 11 a.m.
Crucifixion of the Chris I, and The to 4 p.m. The dinner Is belnf!
Ris en Lord , will be shown al 7 co-sponsored by lhe lire depa rlp.m. Sunday at the Freedom m e nl and lhc Stlplo ·
Gospel Mission on County Road H a r r I so n v I II e A I u m n I
' 31, Bald Knob-SIIversvllle Road . As sociation.

WIC funding increases service
The WJC (Women, Infants and
Children) progra m of Ihe Meigs

grocers. Each Individual cerll·
fled for Ihe program receives a

County Health Deparlmenl now
has sufflclenl funding to add
approximately 175 more parllclpant s. Deborah Lavalley, R.N..
the WTC Project Nurse and
Dlreclor. announced loday.
Currenlly the program Is serv·
ing 1,048 Meigs Counllans In the
nutrition program. A par llclpanl
must be del ermined ro be In
nulrlllonat need by Ihe WT C
heallh professional, and musl
meet Income guidelines.
Any resident of Meigs Counly
who Is pregnant, posl-partrum.
up Ia six months afler delivery,
or breast!eedlng Iup Ia one year
a flerdellveryl and havcchlldren
under live years of age rn a~
qualiTy to parllclpale.
The program provides milk,
eggs, cheese, juice, peanul but·
tPr and Iron fortified cereal's lor
women and children, and Iron
fortified formula , cereal and
juice for Infants. Partlclpanls
receive monthl y !ood coupons
which can be redeemed for
foods at

food pack age designed for specia ! needs .
The W1 C progra m Is funded by
lite U.S. Deparlmenl of Agrlcul·
lure, Food and Nutrlllon Service
wllh the i()('al health department
being awarded annual granls of
federal monies wllh which to
operale Ihe local program .
As explained by Ms. Lavalley,
WIC provldessereenlngfornutrl..
Ilona! problems Including assesslng growth rale, analy7. lng blood
lor anemia and evaluallon of diet
In lake. Nutrllton educallon Is an
Important part of Ihe program.
aecordlng to the nurse, who says
Iha t an eflorl is made lhrough
educa.llon to bring aboul positive
and permanent changes In eating
pattern s so lhal hcallh Is
Improved.
WIC , Ms. Lavalley says, Is a
hea llh program designed Ia
operate as an adjunct to existing
low cost prenatal and-or pedlal ·
ric clinic or physician services.
Addlllonallnformatlon may be
obtained
calllnl! the Mel~s

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See them et our
1howroom.

ILACIWOOD HOMIIPAI
tWoll'a Sunoco Blltlon)
40037 Sumner Ad.
Pomeroy, Ohio 4&amp;7&amp;1
Phone tit 4) 98&amp;-3808

Co unty Heallh Dcparlmcnl I?·
rated In Ihe Meigs Muitl· ~.~~posc
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r~B~u=l=~==::~::99:.2:·:66:2:·=:::!~===========·~

HAVE YOU TAKEN YOUR .
IRA DEDUCTION l

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Rutland history being

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A'DOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY

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How do you manage a flexible income?

Show some school spirit
and help these alumni

Logan names
new grid coach

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Page-7

REMEMBER

Sa nllll,I;U ( ll ; S,.n t'r:lll·

t r!J .

The I)aily Sentinel
Wednesday, April

The

1.. \
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Uu11 -.1 n 111ft IOIIOb - G J:jll
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I l i J. Ko •r ftold i!IJ, Smith 1!11 and .\ , hh~ .
R:ttli '\' , " - ,\ndt•,...o•n Ill· I) 1. -\ ' uunl(
ll~ l i . IIH - I.u-. \n•l•lt'!&gt;,.'iluh ll-" I l l.

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O:ai.Jwut. IO r lflln IIJ .
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No· l~un Ill ) , M'nu·~tt• r !K ) and

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Tt•!IJ4otun:

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ByThe .Bena

By 11\N LOVE
Ihe loss .
Amerlca.n Leagut?
doubl e ! bat 40 times a day and ·
UP I Sports Wrt er
" We lefl 11 men on base ,"
By DAVID 1\VI'I'ABILE
enjoy
every one of lhem . And il
Their -wtn ler of di scontent Pl llsburgh Man ager .Jim LPY·
·UP I Sport s Writer
was
an
cs peeially fun day for
over, lhe New York Mels started land s aid. " One hi I in any of lhrE'!'
Thr
las
l
tim
eCalifornia
's
Mik•'
McLemore.
He's gol to feel as
lhe season lhe way they ended in nings &lt;Jnd wewinlhe game. We
Will
pllchcd
into
lh
r
ninth
inn
ing,
good
as
a
young
man can feeL"
the last one- with a victory.
showed character in coming
he and lhe Angels were an oul
Will. an 18-game winher in
Da,r ry l Sl ra wberry, who back ."
a way from a World Series and 19R6, surrendered four wa lks
walked ou l of spring training for
Pitt sburgh seored a run in lhe
Will was pulled wilh disastrous whil e s triking ·oul eight. Mark
a day In a tiff with manager ninth and had the bases loaded
result s. Tuesday. Will lim ilod Langs ton, who led the AL In
Davey Johnson, llfled a three- before Oroseo ended the l hrea l.
Ihe Seatt le Mariners to five hi ls slrikro ul s lasl season, fanned
run homer lo right -center lo give
Mookie Wilson led off Ihe New
in suc ees s full y go in g lh e jusl fo ur a nti wa lked six . lhe Mels a 3,2 Opening Day York fir s I wll h a single and Tim di sta nce.
in clud ing Doug DeCinces four
VIC'Iory over the Plllsburgh PI- TeufPI reac hed on calchcr's
In Game fi ve of lhc i\ L('S 1imrs - and allowed fi ve hil s in
rates. New York lasl played al in terference. Two outs later.
against lhe Boslon Hed Sox six innings and los t to the Angels
Shea Sta dium In Ga me 7 of Ihe Strawberry, who was fln eiP$1,500
Wi tt's last slarl of 1986 --" h'~ wa s for Ihe fourth stra ight lime.
World Series and posted an 8-5 lor mi ssing the wor·ko ut . o ne out mvay fr om ·g i {/i~1g rhe
Ei sew'here, in the only o lh.~r
vic tory over· the Boston Red Sox homered .
Angels the pennant, bu l wa s Amer ica n League game, MinneIa become World Champions.
Elsewhere, Sl. Loui s routed lifred In favor of reli Pvers Garv
sola nipped Seall le o-4 in extra
Bel ween Ihe World Series Chicago 9-:J. At lant a blanked
Lucas
and
Donnil'
Moore.
innings.
'
lr iumph and Opening Day, lhe Philadelphi a 6-0, Hous1o11 topped
Angels entered Ihe ninlh wil h a Twins 5, Athletics 4 ( 10)
Mels orr field woes were lr um - Los Angeles 6-5 and San Frano-2 lead and losl il on" lwo-oul,
AI Minneapo lis, Kent Hrbek's
peled in lh e press. Tuesday the ri sco edged San Diego 4-.1.
lwo-sl rike home run by · Dave bases-loaded single In the
em phasis was on I he positive as
Cardinals 9, Cubs 3
He nderson off Moore.
boll om oT lhc lOth inning ,
New York raised Its champion-· • AI Chi cago, rookie Jim Lind eAgainst th e Ma r iners. Will sparked the Twi ns in Iheir
ship banner a nd gave oul World
man a nd winning pitcher J ohn pitched a complele game and
Series rings in -pre- g~me Tudor each had two-run singles Mark McLemo re snapped a lie in 5eason opener .
ceremonies.
In a five -run lhi rd inniog lo lead lhe sixth with his (irsl majo r- . . - - - - - - - - -- - - Strawberry sa id he was pla y. St : Louis .
·
league hit lo Icad Ihe Angels 10 a
lng lh is season for Dwight
Braves 6, Phillies 0
7-1 viclory which snapped the
Gooden, lhe Mets 22-year-old
AI Alla nla. Rick Mahler Mariners streak of five oo nsecur lghl-ha nder who is in a drug
pllched a three-hi ller and Ke~ rive Opening flay triumph s.
rehabililalion center after test- Obrrkfell doubled in lwo run s In
To !lt'fld 11 heau1Uullr
Angels Mana ger Genr Mauch
dt&lt;ttign.-d funeral ·
Ing poslllvely for corai ne.
lhesea son openerfor botht ea ms. wa s pleased with his team' s
urra n~~;r&gt;mt'n1 , ju HI nil
"I dedicate Ihe home run and
Astros 6, Dodgers 5·
Opening Day efforts.
Or viMit
lhe season lo Doc !Gooden),"
AI Hou ston, Kevin Bas s
" I'm just lirkled lo deat h,"
POMEROY
Strawberry sa id. "No one under- slapped a lwo-run . sin gle lo Mau rh said . "My pitcher was
FLOWER SHOP
stands bull am veryclosetoDoc
highlight a four-r un e ightlli nn ing superb. 1 could watch Brian
'""' "" 1"""" ·' '"'"1 .....·
I'm in his corner now when he
lha l powered
r~D~o~w~nl~n_:g~lw
~h~o~h_:ad~u:·-l~w~·o~-~ru~n~~~~;~~Ph~.~~~~~~~
needs me. What happened made
Giants Housron.
4, Padres 3
m ~ understand more aboul life.
AI San Fra ncisco, Bob Melvin
II made me unders tand I had lo
belled a pai r of solo homers lo
go out and do my job and work
lead the Gian ts.
·
harder. I mlssedhlm today ."
Bob Ojeda reptaeed Gooden as

•

Start Building
Your IRA Today

Ofi.Y
9

DAYS
lEFT!
T ~" ~ offer t• P.'~

May 31 , 1981 ond tSro be us-ed Ot'lly for

!he put&lt;.ho~ ol Ar1Corved S1b1tum • H S c ~s nog-.

Oel---

'

You'-- AprltB, 1117, to 111ft YGWIAA • .;,d ; (
-

to,_
we oooyour iliA- you blgln

..... • • - " " 1181.
IIIOftll'
fllllf, end you'l pey no '-dorll ..
willldoaw~lt '-oida.

Win! 10 Jo.n ...,..? Just IC*I&lt; to 111.

PEOPLES
BANK
"THE BETTER BANK"
Member F.D.I.C.
2212 .lldqon Al'll.

Pl Plartt w.~.
~1121

SecOftd Street
Mason, W.Va.
n:J.55t4

•

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Wedneldav. April B. 1987

Page. 8 The Daily Sentirlel

Family medicin~: '

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

Stay hea_lthy 'on vacation this year

By Edward Schreck, p.o.
disease and allergies should you
AMislant Profeuor
require medical attt&gt;ntlon .
of Family Medicine
Question: Should I be vaccl·
Ohio Unlvenlly CoUere
nated for any diseases before I
of Olteopaihlc Medicine
travel?
Question: I'm planning to goon
AMwer: Most Industrialized
a ¢\!cation soon. What should I do countries don't require an:.; sp£&gt;·
to ensure good health during my clal vacclnaflons . If you're. tra·
trip?
vellng to tropical countries, ask
Auwer: You can do several your physician or local hMlth
things to help ma~e your vaca· department officials which. shots
tlorf healthful as well as relaxing. are required . The Centers for
II you 're taking a prescription, Disease Control publish a yearly
bring a long enough medicine to list of vaccination requirements
Jast the entire trip. This Is and furnish this Information to
etpeclally Important If you're d6ctors and nurses.
traveling abroad because the
Question: My traveling com·
medication you obtain In a panlon has diabetes . What should ·
foreign country may not be the he do to control his blood sugar?
same as your home prescription.
Answer: If he monitors his
,When traveling. bring along blood sugar himself, tell your
CQples of your drug·prescrlptlons friend to pack enough test -tape
as well as your eyeglass and and other devices to check his
cOritact lens prescription. You blood glucose regularly. If he
should also carry medic alert takes Insulin, suggest that he
t~gs or medical JD cards. This carry It In a vacuum co ntainer
will warn others of health cond l· when vlslt lnganextremely hot or
!Ions such as dlabet£&gt;s, heart 'cold climate for a long time-for

example , during a long bus tour. your doctor about youl' oxygen
It's also wise to ask the doctor needs during the flight - es~­
whether to adju s t your Insulin clally It you ny abovp 22,500 feet .
dose to fit vacation plans and You should also consult your
diet : When traveling by plane. doctor before flying if you have
notify the airline at least two other medical conditions such as
days In ad vance It special low- · a mature pregnancy, earorslnus
salt or low-suga r meals are Infections and seizures not comneeded:
pletely controlled by medication.
Question: Does plane travel
Jet lag probably affects morE'
pose any specia l problems? '
voyages than any other travel
Ans.,.er: If you have chronic hazard . It can cause fatigue and
heart or lung problems, tal~ to make even simple tasks and
decisions difficult. If you'rE'
traveling across several time
zones, plan to set aside a day to
rest after your flight before you
begin s ightseeing or other
activities.
'
\'oar vacation should be both
physically and mentally refresh·
lng. To ensure a good trip,
consult your doctor before em·
barking on a long journey If you
have heal th concerns.

~

Ryan of Texas Road, Charley
and Naomi Smith . Cake was
served In celebratio n of Gladys
Tuckermans birthday .
Mr. and Mrs. Jerry tjolley.
Calvin Lee, were recent visitors
of. Mr. a nd Mrs. Harley Johnson
and Tammy .
Mr. and Mrs. Char les Knapp
visited recently with her grand·
mother Mrs. Peterson of New
Lima Road .

!he.rter Church plans pa.r.rover meal

•~he traditional passover meal

a)d holy · communion will be

o lcbrated at the Chester United
thodlst Church on Thursday,
rll 16. The dinner to honor

•

Jesu s of Nazarrcth wll be served
at 7 p.m, Congregation members
a nd gues ts are Invited to join In
the fellowship of the Holy Week
service.

REVIEW

A donation to the Senior m&lt;:&gt; N,ing with members . ~ing
Citiz&lt;:&gt; ns Centers toward local reminded of th&lt;' Founder's Day
moni&lt;:&gt;s needed in the purchase of dinner and program to be held ;
an&lt;:&gt;w van with u wheclchalr lilt April 30 at the Sportsman ·in •,
was made by XI Gamma Epsilon Athens. The s tateconventlonwas '
of &amp;&gt;ta ~igma Phi Sorority at a announced · fo ~ Ma'y In Toledo.
.Jan &lt;:&gt; ll e HapJonsta!l p nd &lt;
meeting he ld "' the CcntN
recently.
'
· Brend a Hill were hoste~ses ..
,.
Linda Faulk pres ided a t the '
••
•

ALTERNATE - Kelly Lea
Thompson, daughter of Max
and Mary Folmer Sr., Long
Bottom, hilS heen named an
alternate to Buckeye Girls
State lor the AuxlllaTy of
Drew WebSier Posl39, American Legion. An Eastern High
SChool JUnior, Kelly Is a
huslness office education stu·
denl at Meigs High School and
Is active In Flame Fellowship
Ministries. She Is a member ol
the MI. Olive Community
Church where she Is pianist.
She also plays plana and sings
with a local gospel group, The
Pleasant Valley Trio.

READER ADS
IN THIS SI!CI10N PREPARED BY
CONTRACT ADVERTISING, INC.
ALL RIOH'I'S RESERVED, 1987

&amp;Heidnt

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20°/o OFF

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' &amp; YOUTH SIZES
INCLUDING: STRIDE RITE, ·.
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Chapman

Shoes ~

NEXT TO ELBEIFELDS IN POMEROY

Terry Brown, Owner
A prized hunting trophy is every sportsman's fantasy. Whether you hunt or fish, you.will need
the services of an experienced taxidermist whenyou ~home that prize catch. Preserve your Valued
l!OPhy with the expert taxidermy services of Brown's faxidenny, lOcated at 44781 fumeroy ffi&lt;e' in
Cheste.; phone IJ85.a164. This well-known taxidennjst specializes an life-like mountings of game heads,
birds and other wildlife.
ThrOugh many years of training and experienCe, this taxidermist has gained a reputation for high
quality life-like woii&lt;: You can be assUred tliat any game you bring in will be preserved in the moot
exacting manne.; and at ~ you can well afford. Give them a call when you are plann4tg yirur
next hunting expedition I hey will be glad to discuss the different mounts and procedures used and
offer you tips on how best to presave your trophy.
These taxidermy specialiSts have earned a reputation in the hunting communities for top quality
work. Remember the name, Brown's Taxidermy for all your taxidenny needs. With your trophy
· proudly displayed. you can relive the thrill of the hunt for years to come.

· ~ Divers

bodi~s

Sally Lambert, Owner
One of the most professional inswance agencieS in this area

is Lamberts Insurance Agency, located at 115 East 2nd Avenue in
fumeroy, phone 992-lJ64l They have become experts in solving
difficult insurance problems for the homeowner and the
businessman.
These agents are well versed in all phases ·of the insurance
business. Wliether it be~ auto, casuatty or )Jiopeity insurance,
they can advise you of the best policy lOr your pam.cu1ar needs.
By repttsenti.ng many ~ insurance comparues, they are able
to counsel yoo most effectively. They can a® provide a custom
designed insurance package for any type or size of bllWtess. They
~e become knoWn as the agents who can provide the riglit 1 ..
coverage for the light price.
Why not call them lor a free ~~tion toda'~ expets
at l.ambi!ts Insmnce Agency are waiting tp hear
)'Uu. Give
them a caD and let them assist you in a well planned financial future
for your family or business. You can be assured of first-class; person- J • :
alized service when you put 11m fum in charge.
-

au.....,.

seek

Farris said scouring resu lts
from fast-moving water.

..

'!

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•

By RIC CLARK
BELFAST, Northern Ireland
t UPI 1\ - Sypporters of the
oatlaw~J.t:i!ll Republican ArmY
peppered security forces wllh
I{Unllr~ and torched buses In a
rampage sparked by a pollee
crackdown that has postponed
the funeral of a slain IRA
guerrilla for two days.
A sniper shot and seriously
wounded a British soldier late
Tu~sday In West Belfast, an IRA
stronghold. Riots .ral{ed . In Bellast and Londonderry Tuesday
night and early today, and
masked gunmen prowled the
streets of the two cities, hijack·
lng cars and setting them ablaze.
Four people were Injured Including the British' ~Idler
wounded by sniper fire. There
was no Immediate report of
arrests.
Pollee sources Indicated the
IRA organized the rioting to
divert pollee !rom the north
Belfast Catholic Ardoyne section
and allow the outlawed guerrilla
group to bury a comrade with
what ' It calls lull
., "military"
honors.
·.·
Authorities mounted large·
scale serurtty operations Monday and Tuesday lo make sure
tbe funeral of slain IRA guerrlUa
Lauren('{' Marley did not Include
any outlawed paral!l_llltary display - like the rifle volley salute
lradltlonal at IRA funeral$.
The funeral was po1tponed
Monday and Tuesday alter
clashel between some 1110l pollee a~d 1,000 mourners.
Marley, 41, was killed by
Protntant 111nmen laat Thursday In frOnt of hiUCJ'e!lmlngwlfe
and 2-week-old baby.
Pollee aources said thousands
of masked youths - divided Into

Sixty-one bodies were reco·
vered shortly after the vessel
went down . The shipping llpeand
Belgian authorities, citing the
passenger list, said another 7.1
were missing and presumed
drowned - trapped In the sub·
merged ferry .
British authorities, however,
have said missing persons re·
ports Indicate as many as 133
peopl&lt;&gt; may be missing and
trapped Inside the ship.
A Belgian salvage olflclal who
• as~ed not lo be named told
United Press Iniernatlonal salvagers reported they saw "about
50" bodies as they worked to
right the vessel.
Belgian radio and Dutch televlslon reported "some 30 bodies"

groups of about 60 - hurled
stones and firebombs at pollee
and army patrols Tuesday night
and early today, then disap·
peared Into the warren of slum
streets In Catholic sections of
Belfast and Londonderry, 8&gt;
miles to the northwest.

fj~~~~~~~ijiiiaiiteir·itaixici=
ec ~o--.;,;;a~y~e=a=r~~§§~~~EE~,~~
OUR BUSINESS BEGINS
WITH FILLING YOUR
'PRESCRIPTIONS.
ALLSfOAES

).J 7 DAYS AWEEKI

PHAR

/

IRISH
SPRING

SMUCKER'S
CONCORD
.GRAPE JEUY

DEODOIANT

SOAP

21b. ....

3.5 OL

99C

w~re

recovered Tuesday night.
Divers, working In relays by the
light of arc lamps, continued
their SE'arrh for bodies through ·
out the night.
Seven British and a dozen
Belgian divers were Involved In
the search. They were allowed
Into the vessel after toxicologists
cpnducted a survey and determined It was safe lor them to
enter.
S;ilvagc experts had feared
chemical' tank trucks aboard the
car ferry may have spilled when
the vessel capsized, filling the
hold with potentially deadly
materials. But, afler th~ survey,
they gave searchers the go·
ahead.
Cmdr. Guy Coywenbergh, the
Belgian divers' commanding offleer. said the search was hampered by obstrucllons and wreck·
age left when the ferry capsized.
Members ' of seven victims'
families came to Zeebrugge to
keep vigil during the search.
Lt. Col. Willy Bruggeman,
head ing the ldentlflcallon team,
said officials will first try to use
photographs and medical Information to Identify victims removed from the ship llelore
asking relatives to try to Identify
the remains.

OI.Mhl••

'Ifill " " " • " " "'-"'To t.lfftll
Not" 4 ' klsf:of""""'fmn

786 N. SECOND, MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

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WEATHER PERMiniNG

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APRIL 9 10 &amp; 11
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$999
•

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PUREX
BlEACH
1 Galan

HARTLEY SHOES.
PO'l&amp;n, OliO

unc.v.,......o._
'

2

b
of 1986, and "their o sen,at 1orts
Indicated ther&lt;' was no erosion or
scouring at that time."
The reports also lacked re·
qulred dra
..
piers and abutments, and copl&lt;'s
wJnas ofIndicated
the bridge's
of the reports
. the
Thruway Authority's assistant
bridge superintendent , Keith
Giles, failed to sign them as
required.
The victims have been Identified as Douglas Shive, 68, of
Manchester, N.H .: Carey Jack·
son ·Dalton, 66, of Mlssassauga .
Ontario, a nd Roland Charbon·
neau. 32, of Etobicoke, Ont ario.
Identified as missing were:
-Niagara Mohawk Power Co.
employees Edward Meyer, 50, of
Albany, and Donald tlughes, ~9 .
and Robert tloffman, 46, both of
DefreestvUie. who were return·
lng from a bowling tournament In
Syracuse.
-Mary Louise Peck, 47. and
her daughter. Kristen, 22, both of
Northumberland , who nev&lt;'r ar·
rived at .a baby shower In Utica .
-Evangelina Chlv&lt;', wif(' of
Douglas Shive.
-The driver of the tractor·
trailer, owned by Schneider
National Inc., ofGrt'en Bay, Wis.

By CATHY CASH
roll11a district superintendent of · what we call the executl:~eeo ~
DUNN, N.C. (UPli ·:.:-. .Fallen
the church, told reporters the presbytery In Springfield, Mo.
PTL founder Jim Bakker and
board was "under a mandate They then act on our
new PTL President Richard
&lt;from church headguarters i not recommendation."
,,.
Dortch chose not to appear at a
to divulge the results of the
Bakker and Dortch were asked
meeting today."
secret meet lng ol North Carolina
to appear before the board, but
Assemblies of God executives
"We have 90 days to act on the neither attended and Cookman
considering their r~atlons as · Information we have," he said. said their decision - In effect ."Once we have concluded our elimina ted one of the thr~ .
ministers of the dellom1natloit.
The 16-member state board ol deliberations here In North Ca· options available to chun;)I&lt; :
the charismatic denrunlnatlon
rollna, we send our decision to executives.
. ·.. ~\'
Cookman said the board would•.. ··
met under a secrecy "mandate" Cincinnati man,
consider only whether to accep( .:
Tuesday to decide whether to Ca'n"'innali-area
accept the resignations that
"
Bakker's and Dortch's reslsn~; ·'::
!Ions or reject their resignation~·. ;;
Bakker and Dortch submitted
roupl'e win loltery
March 19 or recommend they be
CLEVELAND &lt;UPI) _ Ohio and oust Ihem from the ministry.
lottery officials say holders of r;::::::::::;;--;::==~~·:(
drummed out of the church.
Bakker reslgued from the
denomination and the $172- mil·
Saturday night's two. winning
Ohio Lotto tickets are from the
II o n P T L t e I e" I 5 I 0 n · Cincinnati area .
en tertainment ministry he
Rogert Ferguson o.f Cincinnati
fou nded after revealing he had a and Henry and Adelpha Moyer of
sexual enrounter with a church
secretary and.pald her to hush up Bethel In Clermont County will
share the $2.4 million jackpot,
the affair.
offlclals .said Monday.
Dortch, who became PTL
Ferguson let ·an autolotto rna·
president aftet' Bakker surren - chine at the Central Cafe In
dered the ministry to Moral Ci ncinn a ti select hi s six
Majority founder Jerry Falwe ll, numbers , while the Moyer's
also resfgned from the selected their numbers them·
denomination.
s&lt;'lves on a ticket purchase&lt;! at
Dortch reportedly handled the Tu ney's Genera l Store In
negotiations to pay church secre· F.ellclty.
tary Jessica Hahn for not reveal·
The jackpot, which had been
ing her lryst with Bakker seven unclaimed the week before, had
years ago. Dortch has refused to risen to $2,410.446. FerRuson and
discuss the allegations with the Moyer's will receive an
Gatti.....,
reporter s.
h k 1$ 8 209
1"""
1
4
Charles Cookma n. North Ca· f 20
or years.

in righted ferry

Police crackdown on funeral
sparks riots in Belfast

Lamberts lnsuranee Afency

There are few in'leslments you can Qlake n your 1a1a1 ~
that will provide lllll'e ~ yet abdable reSulls thin a ~
to the
'Dllllq Sllan. Why oot caD them~
at 992-M and make your next appci11rnent at their lui a: lOire
styq sakln?
'

:l:"

" ' - jlllllllllllld.

"That water · velocity will
cause a churning action to
occur," he said. "It begins to dig
deeper and deeper Into the .earth
material around the pier. That's
ap parent ly what happened
here."
However, Farris emphas ized
the theory was based on prelim!·
nary reports and a final determl·
nation would ha ve to walt until
the creek recedes.
The Thruway's chief e ngineer,
Daniel Garvey, said he was most
concerned with determining how
JllUCh stress the concrete bridge
supports were designed to with·
stand. tie said state fil es have not
answered that question, and
"that has to be looked at."
The 19S:l and 1986 bridge
Inspection teports also showed
irregularities. The bridge pilings
were not rh&lt;'Ck&lt;:&gt;d for erosion In
eit her year and the piers under al
least one collapsed secllons was
not checked for erosion In the
spring of 1986 because of high
water.
Garvey said the Inspectors
checked the span In the summer

(UP II .:... Dlv~rs using are lamps
s~arrhed through the night for
bodies trapped Inside the British
ferry t!Prald ol Free Enterprise,
which capsized last mo~tli, leav·
lng at least 134 people dead or
missing.
The 7,000-ton, H&gt;-foot vesSE'I,
which had been resting on Its side
about a mil&lt;&gt; out of Zeebrugge
harbor, was lifted upright Tuesday In a n eight· hour salvage
o~ratlon but parts of It re·
malned submerged In .10 feet of
water.
More than 500 people were
aboard the car ferry when II sank
March 6 on a voyage . from
~ebrugge to Dover.

Sandy IannareW, 0wner
Today, more than ever hebe, a person's ~ d~ to a
large degree on healthy, fashilnable hait A beautiful head of hair , ' ·
can maJ(e any person look and ~ younger and more attractive.
In thll ~ faShiln&lt;OIISt)Jus men and women have foun4 the
Olllelu Bamty &amp;: 'Diairi' Salon, located at 214 East 2nd Stra&gt;t in
1\Jcnay, ph!n! 992-7Wi06, to be 1t1e most progll!;si~ hait .too;,..
stixiX&gt; arWnd. These pnl s¥lllills sp..Y.Ji?e in
· · ~~~t
provide high.fashm styling~ BIS}'-can! sim~
Cutting and stylirig alinti are oot enough to ensure beautiful
bait AJ the Oulelia &amp;aaly . . . . ., Sib!, their experienced
personnel take tine to evaluate each pa50it's hair type to bt5t
Oetennine the Jl!OPEl care and beatmeut Permaneili!, ~
~and faciah are also featured at this wr.pete hair and skill

Many Americans have leamed~en·y their leisure hours
~around the house on do-it· , such as instaJ.
q new plumbing fixtures and the · . Not=it an enjoyable
ana creative way to spend off hours, but by '.!oing the WIXk
yowsel( and buymg the fixtures and supplies at Carter ftumbi!g
l:ledric &amp;: H · you can save n~.&gt;nty.
·
The car
. Eled&amp;"&amp;: tieiUw ~ located at 5310
HebbardsviiJe Road in
phone SM-41119. This finn is well
liked by the PEQille of thS area tt their tfuts to sell high~
products, baCked by warranty, at reasonable prt:es. \bU waJ UiO
6nd that their sales people ·are
~ and can
expeitly assist yoo in ~ the~ merd181¥1Be u the job.
They featUre many famOus mnd J\IIITteS including ;\an•
The extra flleiiiUre ci ~ built into their ~ . valvts
and mi&lt;lceDaneous supplies along with the fine 9I!I.'W:e~ n!llder
wiD malce
~~ alxa:ze.
you're DII!I&amp;~ESCtd in ~a iu:et or are
a E~:_Jf · Nl con~ you'D find it aD at C.~~
&amp;:: II 'it.
·
"i

.......
-- ·-,..,

.U.11a:

By JAMES CARBONE
FONDA , N.Y. IUPli - A
·; federal qfflclal says prellminaJ"y
: reports i~dlcate a record surge of
1 ·water le.j to the collapse of a New
~ '·'York Thruway bridge by "srour·;;:. ing" away so il around a pier.
·.: Three People were confirmed
killed and officials feared the
.t death toll cou ld rise to 10.
~ . Engineers Investigating Sun' 'day's co llapse of the bridge over
, the flooded Schoha rie Creek also
:.. revealed Tuesday that previous
' Inspections of the bridge were
, Incomplete and that state files
• did not say how m~ch water the
bridge was designed to
withstand .
Three bodies hav~ been recovered and seven people have
bN'n Identified as. missing In the
disaster that hurtled a tractor·
traiier and at least thr('{' cars
onto the rocks llO feet below ,
" Recover~ eflot·ts, which hav('
· bet-n h?mpered by continued
,flooding, were to resume today.
·.. · A 201Hooi St'ctlon ofthe540-foot
' bridge collapsed at 10:50 a.m .
while the creek, swollen by
, melting snow and 91nches of rain
: 'In two days, was 10, fcl!t aboye
·' .floOfl ~tag~ and pouring a record
'·volu1me of water over a dam 30
muest to the south. More of the
:-:span ' 40 miles west of Albany
: crumbled hours lat er.
·; Robert Farris, deputy director
· .of the Fe&lt;jeral Highway Admlnls·
tratlon , said on PBS's McNeil·
&gt; Lehrer News tlour that a prelim I·
·. •nury Inspection Tuesday showed
the accident appeared to ha ve
resulted , from the floods. as
opposed to flaws In the bridge's
· design an'cl ronstruct'lon.
"There was .severe scouring
action apparently occurring In
and around the piers that caused
-one of the renter piers to fall
backwards Into .the scoured hole,
causi ng one of the spans to
collapse," Farris said. "It fell
then Into th ~ second span , causIng I hat to come down."

\r;,JZEEBRUGGE,
By DOUG COSPER
Belgium

Chateau Ilea~
&amp;TanniDf Salolt

.

Collllfllll

~-

Brown's Taxldenny

Carter Plumbln9 Eiedrle

~~

t

Wilkesville United Methodist
Church has named Constance
(Connlei Powers, as pastnr. She
Is employed at the Intensive Care
. Unit a1 tlolzer Medical Center In
Gallipolis.
On Good Friday, April 17, the
church will be open all day.
Anyone wishing to come In and
mediate or study may. At 7:30
p.m . that day. there will be a
service called "My Place at The
Cross". Powers and Rev . John
Lewis will give communion . to
anyone wishing to receive it. To
celebrate Easter Sunday, April
19, a Sunrise Service at 6 a .m. Is
planned.

Guy E. Hunter, Director-20 Years Of Experience
Tune and service have honored the name Hunter Funeral
Home, located on Main Street in Rutlaftd, phone 742-2333. fur
many years, this ~utable 6nn has served the people of this area
reliabl and welL They offer dignified. affordable service to families
of all Kuths. These funeral direCtors can offer you a full service or
simple funeral within the means of every familr-_...
·
They relieve you of aD wony and responsioility in a wann and
understanding mannet You may feel secure knowing that the final
tribute to your loved one will be conducted to the pe!'SOI1ili wishes
of each individual family. In addition to their sympathetic cooper·
ation, the directors of this 6nn will gladly answer any questiOns
regCIJC!ing ~need or specific funeral seMces, frankly, honestly and
coMdenlially.
Their d~ is to plan the service with the family to suit your
persona] reqwrements. HWII!r Funeral Home has earned an excellent reputqtion for serving the peopled this area with professionalism and understanding. They will i'elieve you of all the many
detailS that must be taken care of and yet do everything in accordance with your desires.

u.s. Bridge

collapse

PRE-tASTER .SALE

-

Church considers Bakker's fate

Five Wont .

.~..

New. pastor
named at
Wilkesville

.

visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. E ugene Hanning and
Gi)ldys Tuckerman were Mr. and
Mrs . Lewis West of McArthur,
Mr:- and Mrs. Delbert Perry of
~Jgany, Mrs. Elsie Bratton, Mr.
d Mrs . Robert Reeves, Brandl
'd Robbie of Chester, Mr. and
rs . Jack Elam, Carolyn, Mr.
afd Mrs. Paul Darnell, Jeff and
~IIssa, Dorothy Reeves, Bryan
lfiopves, Mr. and Mrs.. Les lie
P.!'ank, Sarah &amp;&gt;th, and Mathew

FloOd blamed
for

BetaSigma Pbi chapterm:ets 1 · '

.

Wolf Pen community happenings
')1\nday

.

~ The Daily Sentinei~Page-9

Pomeroy-Middleport; OhiO

'

79&lt;
~

COMET
Cleaner

....•••,,....
39C
17 OL

�Page

10 .The Daily Sentinel

Ponlen)y- Middleport, Ohio
a

.-....- Local Briefs!.-- . . . .,
Council approve.s fine. f ee report
Pomerov Village Coum·il approved a report of S2,874 for the
sharP of fines and fees collected during the month of
Mar('h during council's Monday meet mg.
\' lii&lt;J g~·s

10 forfeit bo.nd.~ in mayor:ti court
Ten defendants forfeited bo nds and one was fined In the court
Ma yor Ric hard Sey ler TuPsday night .
PorJcilln~ W&lt;'re Mark A. Clay , Syracuse, $48: Charles Mood:,.
Ch ' &lt;hire, $47: Sue Ti llis, Rutla nd, $4!i: Tammy Jo Landers,
Midd leport. $4fi, Tt mot hy Watkins. Colum bus, S49: J odi Je ffers,
Pomeroy. $47; Phhyll ls McConnahey. Pomeroy, $46, a ll posted
on speedi ng charges: Mark Gard. Gal lipo lis, $63, and William
l.awson. Raelne, $6:1. bo th on expired p la t e~. a nd Mary J .
Stock ley, Hac lne. $4.1, Im proper backing
Fined $4:1 a nd costs on an assurea clear distance eharge wa s
.llJhn Wilson .Jr .. Pom£&gt;ro:,
of Pom&lt;•ro~

Middleport mayor ends 13 ca.~ es
Th 11 t ~P n cases wPre proccssf&gt;d through the co urt or
1VIidplepr1r·t Mayor Frc·d Hoffman Tuesday night
r,.,
wen• Hlc•ky Lunsford: Mi ddl eport, $16 an d costs;
Ml'llnda Pa tt erson. Hac lnc, $1:i and costs; Dwig ht H. Sayre.
N('w Haven. W.Va . $16, no cos ts, a ll on spe&lt;'d mg charges;
Eddie Patrlc·k. Mlddlr port, $:.0 and cos ts. disorderly man ner.
and $11KI and costs and 10 da ys 10 jai l. assaul! , Ha rold LJ I!ie ,
Middloport. $25 and &lt;·osts, disorderly manner. and De bbie
l rem~a n s, Ml ddlo•port. $](HI and cos!.&gt;. 10 dav suspe nded )a ll
sPnl f'nC&lt;', destructi on of propertv
Forfe it i n ~.: bonds W&lt;•rc• .James E McKenzie. Col umbu s, $4!i0
driving whil(' mtoxlca ted, and $o0, wro ng way on a one-way
s t r&lt;•c• t. Cot belt D. Ha !Ill r. Mlddlepol't. $100. disorderly manner;
Ja no•t K ("ompson Po lnl P lea saznt. $41; . Roger Dowell .
Mlddl&lt;•port. $411, Elmer Ba ird, Cheshire. $40, Kimber ly Gibbs.
Vin ton. $4!1 , all pos ted on speed ing cha rges and Tamara
l'hild H·ss Pom&lt;•rov , $o0. no opera tor 's license.

EM!'J u nil.~ answer three calls
Meigs Co unty Emergency Medt cal ·Servtces reports thrl'f.'
ca lls Tuo•sday : Pomeroy at 9:27 p.m. to Pomeroy Hea lth Ca re
C•·nf('J' lor Homer Hwd s haw to Vclrra ns Memoria l Hos pita l:
Hu tland at HI : liS a m. to Dewhurst Roa d lor Audrey Patterson to
Jl ulzPr Mrdlca l C~ n l&lt;•r: ChestPr Fi re Departmen t a t 10.57 p.m ..
to an &lt;'iP&lt;' Iril'a l llrr at the Mars hall res idence on Ohto 7

Fish, game group meets Saturday
Mi'lgs Coun ty Fish .rnd Game J\ssorla t ion wil l mer•! S:J !urda\ ,
7 p m. a t tlu • clubh ouse In Chester. The Apn l 4 meetin g was
c.mcPird duf' lo bad Wf'al h&lt;'r.

!'Jynl(:ww asks water con.r;ervation
Svr aeu'&lt;' J'C'SJU&lt;•nts drP ask~d to usp as li tt le wa ter as posstble
on Thu t·sday du&lt;• to tank clea nin g. Water wll l lx• co mplr'lely orr
on 1hi' Flood n.oacl and Ihe 1cmal nder of Syracuse will have low
pn •ssurt.•.

The F:aslr·r Ww Cry of the Sa lvation Arm y will go on sa l ~ In
MlrldlrpOJI Thursdav and In Pomeroy Sa turdav . Anyone
rnlssecl who wi shes a copv may ca ll 992 :1472 or 992-7480.

Rutland adopl .~ water bill policy
II JW\\' poJic') on dl'llnqucnt wa ter bills wa s adoptrd by
Jl utland VII l ag~ Cou nci l at Tuesda y night' s meeting.
llrcotd lng to the nr w policy. If a res ld ~ n! has wa !rr bil ls
""'erdl ng $'lfl and his bills m·r• two or more months past due,
then alter proper not lllea tlon. the water ml'fer wi ll be re moved
It was also df'C iclNI th at no partial payments will be arcrptcd
Bill Wlllwmson. rPprrscn !lng !he Rutland Fi re DepartmPnl
.ts k&lt;•d council to gra n! the depar·tme nt pe rm ission to
tnc·orp•ll ,J tc. Counl'il gran ted the permission co ntingent on the
.rva llabll il y of Insura nce. Wil liamso n wi ll con fer wll h an
.tltOI nt'l and thrn n'JlO I'I bark to counrt l
Council also g, l\c lh&lt;' fire dcp.lrl mf'n t pl'l'mlss ion to IP,u
dow n ill&lt;' old tow n hall, and offered the town li'Uc'k and back hoe
US('

ln

l aZ in g

1ht' st: ucl urr.

It w. ls votrrl to ildvertise for bids to sell a sca nner and to get
on rcpalt' ln g Ia\\ n eq uipment . Stevo' Morris nwt wit h
o·ount• ll to &lt;il"&lt;· uss purchase or a new la wn trac·tot but council
votr~l aga l n s t an.v purc hase at !h is tim&lt;' du e to a lac k of fun ds .
J\ "' •ndl ng I he mt'&lt;'l lng were Ma yor J a mcs Fink, Gregor)· Va n
M&lt;'t&lt;'r. clrt k tn·"surN , a nd eou nr ll members David Wilkes.
Hr rb f.: ll lott . Vkkl Fi nk and Steve .Jenk ins.
~stl m :r t Ps

jJllfJV

fiJt&lt;Js,~--------~-c_on_r_ln_u_ro__rr_o_m_P_a_g_e_1_)__·__ .
·'
..
Pharmacy, testlllro tha t sa id that he was drunk wh~n he · '

·Fru t~
Cur ley was a frequent visitor to
the pharm acy, spendi ng anvwhere fr om ·$20 to $50 on the
lottery da ily. corroborating the
tes timony las t week by Brenda
Montgomery, also a cashrer at
·Fruth Pharmacy.
The prosecution also tried to
show Cur ley to be an individua l
with ' a psychological makeup
prone to do harm to his mother .
Dr. Steven Lynn, a clinical
psyc hologist at Ohio Umvers it y,
said he put Curley through a
number of perso na lity eval uarion tests.
These tests ortempt to show the
nature of the individ ua l by
putting the answers - or the
avoida nce or givmg answers- in
categories show in gw ha tmanner
of personality 15 being measured .
According to Lynn. the test
results ind icatrd tha t Curley was
"antiSOC ial, paranoid ~nd poten
I tall y a danger to- hrmself or
othets." When Roder ick quest ioned Lynn, Lynn sa id that Curll'y
told him rhat his rela tives were
"out to rai lroa d ht m. " Wh £&gt;n
Curley wa s asked about the
transcri pt or the Dec 21, l98b
co nf ess io n , Curley ac t e d
bi'lligerently
Suc h " potc•ntial danger ro
ot hers" was the ma in focus of the
tes timony of Tammy Dalton, a
worker ;11 the Btg Wh eel Car·
ryour on u.s. 3&gt;. She saJd Curley
waved a m ac hete at her. though
not striking her She satd Curley
warnf&gt;d !hat he would ~el fifp to
himsell or any policeman if he
was ever cl! ed fo r DWI. Shr also

J.

Bradsha~

p II• Oh'

f

h'ake m' drinking

EASTER CANDY TO FIL.L
THE BASKET·•·

kills one

man

LOS ANGELES iUP il - A
portion or the roa dway through
lnter na!ional Airport rema ined
closed today so offici a ls ca n
determ ine If the collapse of a
300-foot cra ne that killed one man
a nd hu rt two others ca used a ny
st ru ctu ra l damage. officia ls
satd.
Tra ffic through !he bu sy a ir
port was cx p&lt;'C IPd fiJ be af fected
until at leas t noon today while !he
Inspect ion takes place, officials
The 450,000-pound crane was
movmg . steel bea ms for a con·
structton project at th e vast
ai rport when it co llapsed Tues·
day about 11 a .m .. crushing a
ca r. strewing twisted debr is over
much of the roadway and causing
a huge trafll c jam.
Kee Peck Go h. :14, of Bevcrlv
Hills . dl rd several hours alter
bei ng cut frorn hi s vehicle alt er
the upper portion of lhC' crane
smas hed through the car 's roo f.
airport· spokesman L&lt;'c Nichols
said.

Vet.-ranl&gt;i Memorial
Tuesday Adm lsstons - Kenneth Hayes, Pomeroy, Oessre
Pat !e r s on, Pomero:, ; Guy
Gu inther, Syracuse: Olden Thax·
ton, Racine: Eugla Johnson,
Middleport ,
Tuesday Discharges - Ma ry
Bonecutter, Michelle Brown,
Will iam Ra tliff. Lester Ha wl ey,
Flossie Prun ty . Ethel Hatfie ld.

Glady~

Simpson

Meigs Count y native Gladys
Simpson dted Tuesday mornin g
in Cor tez, Fla. Puneral arra nge·
n\en ls arc pend ing.

ALL PURPOSE FLOUR
BREAD FLOUR

79(

OHIO VALLEY BULK FOODS
514 EAST MAIN
992·6910
POMEROY

RUTLAND

DEPART MEN T STORE
Phone 742-2100
PHICE S EHECliVE THH U SA I. AP fl iL I I. IUU i

$

$2.39 lb. SHREDDED

Bo1led Ham .............. ~~~nM'·· 2. 19
Homemade Ham Salad .••• u~ .... 99&lt;
EcKRicH Chopped Ham ......•.••.. S1.29
Ill OZ. OSCAR MAYER
Wieners .........................r~~... S2.19
SUPIIIOR
Bi -Red Bologna .•~ •••••..••.•u.;... 99&lt;

•

10 LB IDAHO

MILK ............:••••••••••9!. ... 79&lt;

BAKING

12 OZ SliCED KRAFT

POTATOES.:••••••••• M~. 11.69
NEW GREEN
CABBAGE ................~t.. 19&lt;

AMERICAN

CALIFORNIA

16 oz.

CHEF'S SPREAD ...9.m, ... Sl'

JO COUNT

CHEESE ................ f.~~. SJ .89

fto m Prl's hlr nt F t ankli n DPinno
n.oosrvc lt tu so·r' k• · highly r ura l
;J l'l'HS .
l na crc·s~l bli t )' of l l n ~s th rough
hea vv w ood ~ l'(' mal ns a mu jor

diffi cult\·, l·(lpp s.11d J{rpah ran
hr slow shr ad dNI. because
workers oft C' n havp 10 wa lk m ii(\S
of lim• to fi nd dama ges. ca t'l'ying
tools a nd J'&lt;'Pa lr t'&lt;] ulpml'n!.
/lccordlng to Kl pp. power mu st
llr rcs tOH'd In a sys!Pmallr
order. Mai n di s tri bu tion lines
mus l be Ill s!. shC' said. followed
b\' lines with the larges t numbN
oi consumers. and then by tap
lines with on.-or two consumers
Som ~ !lm es. Kl pp said, one house
on a hllls ldr will be served hv a
mlle·long line
During the weekend storm .
Sml!h reportf&gt;d that thr('(' Buck·
eye Ru ra l substa tions we r~ dow n
for varying periods of time. The
substations distribute Buck&lt;•ye
Rura l's e lectr lclly, which Is
genera!Pd In StPubenvllle, and If
a subs tation Is without power,
consume!'ll servief&gt;d by that
s ubstation will be without power.
One of Buckeye Rura l's subs tations wa s. not res tored unt il
Sunday . Smith said .
"It's like a tree." he com·
mentf&gt;d , "with the substa llon
being the trunk. Th,ere's no point
r'! xlng the llmbs of fhe tr·re If the

..... -..._co.
... - - . ,........
"' ...._ .... ....... ..

. . . . ., . Q _ _ , _ . . , _ , , _ ......

•• ..,o&lt; Mo., .. . ............. k _ _ ..... &lt;..,

........ . ... _
... .,... ............ ,c.....
.., ,. ,..,.,~ ..... ,_, ., _
, c.o-.. l""~"'
4 .. .... -

........ .. . . . . _ .. ,

C..Ool TO-•

......,.,,
T .... _

~~;-~ ·== ::::::~::.'='=·~·
:;..~!l:o~~ '!"'-~"::"::=o-...::

CO'I Of:OIIli"'E •
"'O~DU

, .. ~.

I UUiO . . Ool-.R

w H&gt;• UOU ~-~··
f"IIU ~YO&amp;I'IM

""'"

··
1u ·o.o~
~o•• u..:•

...

lio ..

0.0.1 KfOII{ ~ ... lUI&gt;&lt;&gt;"
,, OO HJ u •u• o•v

- ~ oo o "'

CELERY ....................!~..-69( '

,. IIIII
.. .
• •• •

""
"'.
••• •

.. .

.._
-..........--... - ..."....__

ll !lo'rt

... ..

... •

1 -M

.... ..

....

rL~-----------1
Clusified p1p1 cot~er rM
JollowinJ 1~4!phDM a~np•

=-=·

·=-~· =~=

1.1'/t 01. CAMPIIU'S

Public Notice
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Sooted proposals will be

received at the:
DIVISION OF
RECLAMATION
DEPARTMENT OF
NATURAL RESOURCES
1856 FOUNTAIN SQUARE
SECOND FLOOR
COLUMBUS, OHIO 43224
until Friday, May 1, 1987 at
11 :00 a.m . Daylight ·sav·
ings Time and opened there·
after for furnishing the ma·
terials and Performing the

labor for the execution and
construction of:
PAGEVILLE II
RECLAMATION PROJECT
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
RECLAMATION PROJECT
NUMBER MG· Sc·3·S
in accordance with the plans

and specifications prepared
by the Department of · Na·
tural Resources, The DiviSIOn of Reclamation. Columbus, Ohio Bids will be
opened in the Second Floor
Conference Room of 1866
(Building Hi oflhe Fountain
Square Offices of the Ohio

chased from mmonty bulineasesshall be asnt forth in
the tpecificationa.
CONTRACTORS REQUIR ING ASSISTANCE IN SE·
CURING BIDS FROM CERTIFIED MBE SUBCONTRACTORS AND
SUPPUERS
MAY CONTACT TilE STATE
'EQUAL EMPLOYMENT CO·
ORDINATOR BY CALUNG
!6141 466-8380 DR TilE MINORITY BUSINESS DEVEL·
OPMENT OIV!SION BY CALUNG 1614) 448·5700 OR
TOU FREE ON 1-1800! 282·
1085
APPROVED FOR PUBLI ·
CATION IN Tho Daily Santo·
nel. Pomeroy, Ohio on April
8 and 15, 1987.
RECOMMENDED:
Larry W. Mamome. Chief

Division of Reclamation
4 / 1 / 87
APPROVED ·

Jospeh J Somme r,
Otrector

Department of Natur•l

Resosurces
4/ 2 / 87
14) 8. 1 S. 2tc

ttus project as determifted
by·The Divis1on of Reclamation is $493.581.50.
A pre- bid meet1ng will be
held on Tuesday. April 21 .
19B7. at 11 :00 a.m. at tho
site.
Copies of the plans, specifications and proposal forms
will be fon,varded from the
Division of Reclamation,
Department of Natural Re·
sources. upon receipt of a
check in the amount of

'Public Notice

effon to ensure that certi·

fi~d minority businell ~b·
contractors and met•men participate in the cont rkt. The total value of aubcOntrM:tl awarded to and
m•t eriat1 and aervicet pur-

&gt;?rrt

Tomato Juice .....~ ......... ~~~••.•!. 99&lt;

~ ':liT~

Chunky Mixed Fruit .... ~~~••.•.• 99&lt;
We Have An Open Door
Policy - 24 Hours A Day!

Lemon Lime Drink .......mt. S1.29
Argo Peas •••.•••••••IJ.Jl~-••••• 2 uNs 99&lt;
(heer Detergent •••••••• u.p_.~-. S1.29

'•
1 •; Card of Thanks

ou

EMERGENCY
CARE CENTER

!AM/I ·11111114M
lOIMP.. I t!~"'-"\IA!~t&gt;v~~ f\'wll~ ~

•

14 oz.

LoJe My' ~arpet .........·•••• S1.89
uoiuou.

·

. Snuffle Fabric Softener •••• S1.49
twill PACK

Bounty Towels .................. S1.49
IS'hOLWIIlNit'S

Pink

..................... S2.1

March 1, 1987.
·
The CONTRACT DOCU MENTS may be tKamined ot

the foUowing locations:
leadmg Creek ConlltfVan cy District , 34481 Corn Hoi ·
low Road. Rutland. OH
45775 ,
Burgess &amp; Niple. Limited.
5085 Reed Road, Colum·
bus, OH. 43220

For site inspection or
questions perta1nlftg to the
site, contact Mr . Jeck Crisp,
leading Creek Conservancy
District, Corn Hollow Road ,
Rutland, Ohio, telephone
16141 742 ·2200
Copies of the CONTRACT
DOCUMENTS moy be obtained at the office of Burgess &amp; Niple, limited. located at 6085 Rood Road.
Columbus, Oh1o, upon payment of $35 .00, NONE OF
WHICH WILL BE
RE ·
FUNDED .
By order of the leading
Creek Conservancy District
This 23rd day of March,
1987.
Karen S Clark,
Acting President
141 1. 8, 15, 3tc

Public Notice

•
•

'
•'
'

•'

• CARD OF THANKS
Perlllps you sent a lo·
Yely card.
Or sat quietly in a chair.
pirhaps you sent a fu neral spray,
If so we saw it here.
Perlllps yau spoke lhe
kindest words,
As any friend could. say:
Perlllps you were not
there 1t all.
Just tlloucM of us that

Clay.

'

Whatever you did to
• console our hum.
We think you so much
•• whlltver the part.

Till Fail[ of
atCIC . TAY OR

Plus connecting piping
and appurtenances
The estimated construe·
tion cost is 8378,000 as of
March 1, 1987.
The succassful BIDDER

shall be required to move
onto the •ita and c::ommence
work within 7 working days
following notification to
proceed and shall be required to complete the well
dr illing and development
fieldwork within 90 calendar days following corn-. 1
mencement of work at the
s1te . The entire proJect including laboratory testing
and site $:Onatruction shall
be completed within 180
calendar days following no ·
tification to proceed.
The CONTRACTOR shall
be respon sible to maintain
equipment on site to atd, if
nat.:essarv . in on · site mobili·

zetion
All BIDDERS shall submot

with their bid the type of dril ling equ1pment and proposed drilling method• to be
utilized. The soils testing
laboratory to be utilized, if
other thon the BIDDER 'S,
shall be included.
Copies of the CONTRACT
DOCUMENTS moy be ob·
ta ined at the Office of Bur·
gess &amp; Nipla, limited. loca ted at 5085 Reed Road.

Columbus, Ohio. upon payADVERTISEM ENT
FOFI 81DS
· Leading Creek

Conaervancy District
344B1 Corn Hollow Rd.
Rutland , Ohio 4575
Separate sealed BIOS for

roy, Ohio, according to its
bylaws. on the third Wednes-

mont of $35 00. NONE OF
WHICH WILL BE
RE·
FUNDED
By order of the leading
Creek Conservancy District .
This 23rd day of March,
1987.

Karen S Clark ,
Acting President

the construction of Water
Supply Wells and Appurten ·

business as m~y propartv
come before said meeting
Paul E. Kloos
Secretary
!31 26 , 14!1 . 8 . 14 4tc

laad1ng Creek Conaervancy
District Office at 34481
Corn Hollow Road, Rutland,
Ohio 45775 until 12:00

Public. Notice

May 5 , 19B7.
The WORK covered by the
CONTRACT DOCUMENTS
for ConlrtC1 ' 83·2 includes

5

H

ppy

Ada

i==;;;;·=====~

Happy 40th
Aaalvertary
Art &amp;8ol•t•

on.ora .

Love, Don &amp; Tina
Max &amp; Charlie

Two pump control valve
and meter voults

3

•Dryen •Freezers

PARTS and SERVICE

and re·
core
and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.
r•n•rir

PAT HILL FORO

Mid.epr~rt, Ohio 4 57 60

SALES &amp; SERVICE

We C•rrv Flthlng Suppllu

Your Cable 8o
Phone Blllo Hare

Pay

lt--------rt
1

EAGLE RIDGE
AUTO REPAIR

t

IUilHISS PHONf

P!P..., 16 Ul 9U-6SSO
IISIDINCI ,NON!
16141 992·7754
1t211rtn

992-3325 IIUCl

NO SUNDAY CALLS

24 HR. SERVICE

Mobile Home ul11, lirtt I
wheelt Ph 014-378·2243.
Buyln; daMy gold, alhltr aolnt,
rlng t, jewtlry, tterllng wtrt, old
c ~nt . llt(ll currM~cy . Top prl-

Homelite
Jacobsen

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY

·AUTOMATIC

TRANSMISSIONS
REBUILT I REPAIRED

SUGAR RUN
ASHLAND
190 MULI£11Y AVE.

POIEIOY, OH.

PH. 992·9949
lab lorton,

ow-

2+·86-tfn

992·6611

10-t -tfc

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION
CUSTOM BUILT
GARAGES
POLE STYLE or
CONVENTIONAL

FlEE ESTIMAHS

PH. 992-2772
3·11-17-1 mo.

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FilE DEPT.
lalhan Bulltll"tt

EVElY
SAl. NIGHT
6:30P.M.
ftKtory Chelte
12 Gauge Shoi..M Only

IH·Ifn

SANDY'S
AUTO SALES

Cast •fum.
25' ,. 29• lb.
#1 COPHL.............. U •

.Automotlwt Repair
I Se,lca

#2 (Oiftl ...............,32•
Irony Alvmltlum
Stell••.

TUNIUPS to WNSMISSION
CAU •n-740J Apt.
St. Rl. 33, r-oy, OH.

SCIPIO UCYCUNG
loeatod 2 MI. E of P -lfto
On
RoN11A2

....

.,,2·3.~·~

"VINYL SIDING
"Al-lUM SIDING

••on
IN
IHSilAnoN

IISSEU
SIDIIG CO.

•• ..... hilt

We'l s.n You A
Used Car or Fir
Your Olcl One

cllhofund ... o. 102·131·1885. '

Tour Quid" . Oo• monev motl·
vate you1 1-'•Y to ...,..
ComnMIIlont·lanut. Ftntaatlc
opportunlt~ to tarn
tl00-

HEAnNG I COOLING
IHI. .tlol ... smoll
volts.

•-dol

lnstolatlon of ........ &amp;
hoirnlclillor~ lurnoio, Jo.l
, ......... oil ttn&lt;titieol. .
AKwerk-•t....

CALl 16141 915-4222
SPECIAL:
HEIL-Pootcovo olr
condhionlng tor mobile

PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121

or modul•r ho~n. 2'h
or 3 ton units lnstolled
on pod lo r11dy to cool.
Price: 110et.85 Dlue !IX.
4-l -'i7-1 mo.

6-17-tfc

JO'S
LlnLE lED lAIN

GEARY'S
BODY SHOP

St. II. '''· Syromt

IE-OPENS
MARCH 20

550 P... St, 'Mid.JpDt'l

Ph. 992·3537
4·1·'17·t mo.

Pottery end Gilts.
Bird Bethl, Outtide
Yard Dollo . Jeoue

Statues; Virg in Mary
8c Angoto for Yordo
end Graves.
It ••• Sta ltftrt

C•••

A1111111111 t: I' Ill I' Ill :,
3

Announcement•

t ••

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.
EUGENE LONG

VINYl &amp; AlUMINUM
Complete RemoMIIng
Rooting of oil Typos
Compt.te Gutter Wortc
Workec:f. irl home are•
20yt lfl

"Free Eatimatea"

CALL·~·~~ ~

Ph. 161

WOODWORK$
CUSTOM :
•PLANING
•JOINTING

fOf Ht rbal Llf• C!IMI Mtrla It
448·31 31 1Otm. to lpm. Of
441·2200 Ah" Opm .

Picking up lvnk o•• · Ctll ah•
o.oo""' Coli 114·992 ·0041.
I wil not be rnponaUIM for tny
dHII othllr thtn my own.
Slgntd l flan A11try Wlllltmt

4

ltnd rHUml to Dlant l•ve·
goot. Advocooy • PrOtootl¥o
lervlc81. Inc,, 11141 lannadl
Roed, It ClllrlvHI,, Ohio ,
01110. AatumH mutt M tent

Potkkwl INtl..bte wllh H..d
St.r1 fOf' Proortm·Fitcal ..ortttrv High l chool DI..CIIM , ..
WOfll

1'1..,...1. PrM•tnca wtll be o'Mft

to lndivkkl•ls whh oomputtt

tltpel'ltn CI In word proc.ting
and b"'c accounting akth
S,.ary. 111 .&amp;0 Pff hour. Applict·
dons wltl bl ttken It Itt•
Otlllt· MtiQt HtMf ltart Adm l·
nllt,.t lvt Off lc:: t , Woodltnd
Ctntt rt. Inc., 412 VInton Pl...
Gell lpollt, Oh to untltl • 00 P M.
on Tf'lurlday, AprK 8. Fotlnfor-

Al041 P11nt1 Ph &amp;14·44t· 1797.

Jobs. 011.040 .
yr. Now hiring. C•ll
8000 bt , A-98015 for
fotd lfll litl.

304-115·4121

VARIOUS PATIERNS
AND WOOD SPECIES
985-4176 or 915-3564
361132

RD .

Otve IWIY IH range. quHtktna.
blo """''no •"""· coil 304-171·

0310

Hiring! Qowrnftlent Jobt-your
... . . t 11.000 -tii,OOO. Phone

&amp;-· Lollt 11nd Found

coil rofund...o 111021135-1881
En . 1449. ...

,_oy

1124 Eatt Mlin St.
IIOIIH!Too••wot.frl
!1 ..... ,, , . ....

Pll. ····2160

V. C. YOUNG Ill

1,!-•AflPOiat-t

4·15-' 86-lc

dfi'H In ttlttM fteld raqu" old

1 puppi.. tmtll to mid. build. Mature ptft on only to btbytlt
Pt" ttnllf C.OIIi t Ctll In tven·
old In ot.1t homt All 3 thlfrt
lngo . tl4·311·1180.
I Co• ntoo' ~ '! ""' Ph 614·441 ~--::----:-:-:----:-:-::
p .M
Malt PupJJV 10wkt . ofd: Vr --~~'--:---Chow a 'IJ Q,.at Otnt Johhn·
1300 Per W.tlt
ton' • Trailer Coun 15.
Delivery, DrNif, lllt1
Lot:tl comptny hu opening for
2
bagt of elot hM a Hltt rt l Full Tlmt ptopl t P-'d
sho... tkt .et Ph. 114-441- Ylt ltlon fWt t ytiW, mlllor medle11 3. .
c.. bent dtt. Ctll Thurt tnd Frl
Ph. 114·441·745t

7 femal e puppltl, mhctd brMd.

•MOLDING

S.ndoyo1 p.m.-7 p.m.

Ohio

Hllp Waruld, Prott ctiYIIarYtot
RtPrHentatlve tor •eenoy HrY·
lng lduhl w,_h mentll rltlfdl·
tlon 5n the 0.1~11 area
1'..-t·tlmt potHion. hchllort

eq.,.l opportunhv tmploye.r,

304-110·&amp;937

RIVERINE ANTIQUES

·-oy.

,aEAUTICIANI
Man...,- tnct llvtlttt nttdtd for
Ho~ ond r - . l'ooolty
Solon to loo . -lnt 10011 In
OIIUpoiM. Comt Jok1 the grow·
lnt f1mHy 11 FIMII Hilt Ft·
ttMon•. We oft• NllfY, oommltRont, ICNinetment, ldueation.
profh proeram plut ....,., flor
lntOfVIow olil ooMoct 114· 71t ·
8313 .. 11 far Jtne.

"JJUon u ll 44.. 1152. o.HI•
MtiGI Ht Jd lttn, A ONition of
Woodland Ctnttrt, Inc. Ia an

G i veaway

On t meft neturtd houM clfl,

SERVICE

M2·U15 or M2-7J14

vround uow pooh'- ovo8ololo.
Coil t · ltt·l l l· ..t2 ht, A
0431 OH dotolla. 24hn.

8"1'

Ill

CARPENTER

wortc

AlA UNEI NOW HIRING. Aoo·
INIIIoftltll. flight MtlndiRtt.

qulred. Coli... OOUrH

ANnQUES
IUY OR SEll

- Addont and rtmadtNnt
- Aoollng ond grrtt• wortc
- ConDf.., wor\
- Piumtolrotr ond olectrlcol

t1 ,000. wit Many co~
IMMflte-advancetrilftt, man~g •
mtnt potltloM evelleble. can
Sut for lnt~r~lew. 114·21•·
11421 Not Jult 1 Job.

by April 24th.

l- 27-2 1110

YOUNG'S

Help )Nented

Hlrlngl Govttnmtnt jobl· your
,,•• •1a.ooo-aee.ooo. Phone

. ,,..........

~~

lfr..i EstlmatHI

•s ••we..
H·

11

REPAIR

··F- Elltlnm.t..

. ... ····2101

:11 '! V11. 1",

RIASONAIU • Rll!AILI
8-21).'86 tfn

3 20·87

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992·3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL
FILh.• DIRT

I 111J ii 'IVIII• 'll l

61H43·5248

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

26• ..

•ror

Dump Truck, tingle axle, 1Oft.
btd. 5·•r,Hd. 2·1Pftd rt ar end,
low ml ngo Colt 114-813·
8832

2nd Avo Mlcldl.,.,., Oh. llt4112-3475.

Electronic Organa
Mobile service

TecYmaeh
Weed Eotor

(Non Sheet

111111t1, and ptllflll IIIJtltlistntiotl.
.. ·All itlltl'ltttd crltlzMs art tiiCOII'Qtd to at·
tend tilt hllrill wlllrt lillY will lit afforded till opportunitJ to COtllllllt on !h propolld application,
or tilly •J Subtltit writttn COIIIIUIS to 1111 Office
of tilt lllyor o• or lltfort April 13, 1917.
Frt4 HoffiiH
of liMeport

t nd n.wer utld c•n Smith
Buldt·Pontlac, 1811 Elatlfn
Avo .. Golllpollo. Coli 114-448·
2282

cn . Ed lurkltt lart. Shop.

TVs, Antennas
Satellite Sales
Installation
Service

Rt. 124, ,_,., Ohio

Announcementa

The Villqe of liddlport will hold~ public hear·
inc on Monday, •rril13 , 1987. beltnntncat 7;30 p.
m. in tile Counci Chttnbtr, 237 Race St., Iiddie·
port. Ohio.
The purpose of the hurinl is to discuss the
Villa&amp;t's propostd application for funds under the
Ohio Deperttntnl of .Devtlopment:s CDIG Sn11ll C!·
ties Compt'thensivt Housin&amp;!Mtl&amp;hborhood R;v,.
talizatton Propam. Tilt application is for a two-year
period, and requests f1111di111 in the 1110unl of
$400,000 for • • Jtll.
The proposttl actiYitles include the followi~&amp;:
llousin&amp; rthlbllltation, tlelllolltion of nc~nl dtla pidattd ltnldllm. aw-lk and strlll iltlpmt·

Jim Mink Chev -Oidt Inc
8111 Oent Johnton
114-441·3172

J.R.'s REPAIRS

Brigga &amp; Stratton

Flattened Alum. Cans

'

u1ed ctr•

Uted Mobile Hom11 Ptl e 1•·

Day or Night

fk.td[jil.ll lo-t·,

I

We pay c11h for late model cle1n

441-0t7tl

All Makts &amp; Modtla

Authorl11d Strvke
&amp; Ports

Hrnt•,t t HJ

PUBUC HEAliNG

G&amp;M TV
REPAIR
9•9-3088 Bus.
9•9·2606 Home

repaira and weldrng .
IAII makes 8o modale(

REPAIR

Mldtlleport, Oh.

40 ACRES - Old 9 rm lam,
home. 4 DRs. free gas and
same bUildings on good road
Just oil Rt 14 3 111 Rutland
Townshtp. $43.000.
66 ACRES - Of vacant land
wtlh lots of trees and all
m111erals tn Sec. 25 Rutland
Townshtp
43 ACRES - Orange Tpwn·
shtp. Furnace. 3 car garage,
9 rm home and buildr ngs
POMEROY - 4 BRs, hot
waler heal (gas llfed). 2
baths. storms. carpel111gs, 2
parches. and small lol
Owner ma y help linance
Only $28,000.
REEDSVILLE - One lloor 6
rm home on 21ots. One lor a
tratler. TP water and drilled
well Askmg $1 6,000
RUTLAND - II rm s.. 2
apis.. rentals near the P0
Woodburner, gas lurnace
and 2 lots. $25,000.
WANT TO SEll? CALL

Wantad To Buy

OlD ORIENTAL RUGS
WANTED Any tirt or condition.
Coli toll frH 1-100-433·7847.

PH. 949-2801
or 949·2860

Roger Hysell
Garage ·

.

1·1·"17· 3 - ·

1-(11 14)·992-3326

JAMES KEESEE
PH. YY~:H.&lt;~~

49835 St. lt. 124
Racine, Ohio 45771

SIAU ENGINE

John K. knh
Owntr/M.chanic

Phone

Super Yerd Sale. Frjdly, April
10. 9 00 till 4·00, 1308 Mudowbrook Drive. 'Y'trynictchlld·
ren a and teen boya clothing. glrla

TOP CASH p.. d for '83 model

"FREE ESTIMATES"

"AI Reasenabte Pritts"

Truck, auto, llo
he.avy equipment

PH. 949·2893
or 949·2756

218 E. 2nd St.

'Hugl'l Yard Stl t, April Sl, 10, 11

9

•Now Roofing

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp;GARAGES

8c Vicinity

bedspread , shut music. etc

•Insulation
•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows
•Replecemtnt Windows

BISSELL
BUILDERS

....... Pf'Piaiisii'iit .....

Below S idara J t werly, Galllpolit
Ferry, thousand of itema

VINYL I
ALUMINUM SIDING

949-9070 or
949·2

992-2196

Middleport, Ohio
1 -13-tlc

814-18&amp;-3&amp;08 Brownandgold

nailer wtth ewnlng.

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

ACiTION
TOWING

M1kt1

161 North Second

the following approxim1te

Telt pumping.

~II

PLUMBING I HEAnNG

- - - - - - - - -1

P;;'..:~~G"io 4oo

985-3561

•Waahers •Dishwashers
•Ranges
·
•R etrlgeraton

Middleport
8c Vicinity

cent items and give tways.

4 · 7· '87· 1 mo .

24 HOUR TOWING
&amp; ROAD SERVICE' .
USED TIRES
&amp;BATTERIES

.. ...

Saturdev. April 1 tth, Ia m 3p.m 36767 Teut Rd 2 mll81
oH fllitwoode Rd . s.... arM 10

12 Months Free Financing

4 / 8/ 1 mo . f.

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

. t. Poin·arov..

TWIN MATTRESS/BOXSPRING ............ '98.88
FULL MATTRESS/BOX SPRING ............ S148.88
CHESTS .......... $49.95 RECLINERS ..... S99.9 5
DINEnE/ 4 CHAIRS ............................. S99.95

992·71132 •

(CUT OUT FOR fUTURE USE!

Movfng

Car, .1TV, toys, cloth81, tlou••
hold Items, m11c. Th . &amp; Fri t0 -8.
n 1 3 Sunaet Or . Gllllpolls

108 W. Moin, Pomeroy, Ohio
PH. 992-3307

CAll 7 DAYS A WElK

- ---

o'clock noon (local time)

quantities ·
Two 18"' x 36" diamater
gravel pocked water supply
wells complete with 400
9
gpm well
pumps to be installed in exioting walls.

•Waddings
•Graduations
•Valuables
•Ins. Claims
•Special e,;anta

sign•

EMPIRE FURNITURE

VHS HOME RECORDER

'••i·

handicap persons to camp. lott
of gOodln. cloth8t, 8 family
Thurs, Fri 6: Sit George Carter
ruldance oft 180, Look for

ttn

FREE LANCE
35MM
PHOTOGRAPHER
lranslm 3Smm &amp; 110
livt ~ldos to VHS Video Jape

Var(l &amp; S.ke Salt Lun cfieon

Served . Btnlflts go to send

t41 1, 8, 15, 3tc

ances. Contract 83-2, will
be will be received by the

IIlii

16 OZ. DEL MONTE UGH1

Adviser buried

The estimated construe·
tion cost is $1 66 ,000 es of

Wast Second StrHt, Porno·

H. Second Floor. Columbus.
Ohio 43224. !Phone· (6141
ADVERTISEMENT
265· 1058j . I
FOR BIDS
Each. bid must be eccom·
Leading Creek
ponied by o BID GUAR ·
· Conservancy Distric1
ANTY, meeting the require34481 Corn Hollow Rd .
ments of Section 1 S3. 54 of
Rutland . Oh io 4675
the Ohio Ravised Coda
Separate sealed BIDS for
CONTRACTORS ARE AD·
the construction of State
VISED THAT IN ACCORD·
Route 689 Water Main ,
ANCE WITH THE PROVI ·
Contract 83-1 and 30,000
SIONS OF THE JANUARY
Gallon Elevated Water Tank,
27. 1972 EXECUnVE OR · Contract 83 ·3, wilt be re·
DEFt BY THE GOVERNOR OF
ce1ved by the Preaident of
OHIO AND AMENDED EXthe Leading Creek Con•••·
EClmvE ORDER 84.9, FEBvancv District et the Di1trict
RUARY 15. 1984, EQUAL
office at Rutland, Ohio, until
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUN12 o'clock noon, (local time)
ITY CONDmONS ARE AP·
May S, t 987. and then It
PUCABLE TO THIS BID.
said office publicly opened
WAGE
RATES
~STAB· and read etoud.
USHED IN ACCORbANCE
The WORK co~ored by the
WITH
SECnON 1513.18 CONTRACT DOCUMENTS
AND 1513.37 OF THE RE for Contract 83-1 include~
VISED CODE ARE ALSO APthe following approl!limate
PliCABLE.
quentitiea :
Bids are sulod end od·
6.400 feirl of 8 inch wider
d - to: DEPARTMENT main togothar with tho nacao.
OF NATURAL RESOURCES.
oary apportllnlng WORK .
01\llStON OF RECLAMA·
The ntlmated conatrllc·
nON.
1855 FOUNTAIN tion cost Is $87.000 u ol
SQUARE. BUilDING H. SEC· Morch 1. 1987.
DND FLOOR, COLUMBUS,
The WORK covered by tho
OHIO 43224 No bidder moy
CONTRACT DOCUMENTS
withdraw his bid within sixty for Contract 83· 3 includes
(60) d~ oftOf tho llciUol dote the following approJCimate
of d1o opeotiug lhnof.
quantltiea:

123.151 ol tho Oh io Reviled Code end Adminlatratovo Rule 123:2· 15-02 of
the Depanment of Admin·
i.trative Servicet. the CON·
TRACTOR shall make every

46 OZ. CAMPIEU'S

Doalor

Public Notice

Swim Molds • lnterpretifll Setvices

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
IIJ Ucensed Clinical Audiologist
::t
! (614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

New Holland, lush H(l!l
·Form E!plipmottl

oarv appertaining WORK

LEGAL NOTICE

p .m . for the purpose of
electing director• and the
transaction of such other

.!

GUYSVIllE, OHIO
A~lhoriud John D11re,

Public Notice

Notice is hereby given that
the annual m110ting of the
stockholders of Farmers
Bancshares. Inc. will be held
at "tha Office of Farmers Bank
and Savings Company, 211

day ol April, 1987, ot 3 :00

C)

U. ( ·RT. 50 EAST

hrtn Equl~11111t
P•tt• &amp; Servl"

Public Notice

Dtfpartnient of Natural Resources. The estimate for

t he State
A 1 provided In Section

Bean w/Bacon Soup ..... 2 CANs 99&lt;

-

· Computerized Hearifll Aid Selection

SAUS " SERVICE

f"'

promote t he best interest of

..

-

.. •

BOGGS

NOOIO&amp;V

4.6 OZ. GATOIAID POWDEIED ORANGE or

'

_

• •
.. . .
,._.

.. ..... Giillijjo1Ts ........ .
&amp; Vicinity

100•"' ouuo..
- IDOO• . .MI UOU
- IN
IM II. I D&amp;Y
IDOO"' f. IOU

bracu such combination alternate proposals 11 may

Perch Fillet .................. ~!f•• S2. 99
14 OZ. TASTIIIID
(hicken Livers ....................... 69&lt;
n oz.
Reams Noodles ............ ~!9... s1.2 9

tru nk has been sawf&gt;d orr."
So u!though consumers may
locate a brea k In a line . the loss of
power may not or· igi nate at the
break, Smith sa id. However. he
addro. "It docs help us when
co nsumers . let us know I he
locatio n of brea ks."
Smit h sa id Buckeye Rural's
stSndard rlght -of·way Is 20 feet
on eit her side of a power line.
however. sometimes In heavy
woods. fa llmg t rees ra n still
c·a usc problems.
Mea nwhile, some Meigs' resident s continue wa iting Impatientl y for electricity to their
homes to be rl'storf&gt;d .

PENNSV ILL E. Pa . iU:'H
About 100 people attended the
funeral of Gregory A. F ronlus.
who was the fir st American
mlll!ary adviser to dll' In combat
In El Salvador .
Fronlus was burled Tuesday In
Fayel'te County. with full mll·
ltary honors, onp week after he
was killed along with 42 Sa lvadoran soldiers during a pre·dawn
rebel attack on a mllltary base.
He wa s 27.
Members of the Speelal Forces
Third Battalion from Fort
Bragg, N. C., firf&gt;d a rifle salute to ~
Fronlus at Gree"f Ridge Cemetery In Pennsville .

10 &amp;1'1
) 0..'1'1
1111t.n

accept tho bid which om·

B R E C c r ew s ._ _I_C_on_l_ln_uro_r_,o_m_Pa...;;g'-c-1_1- - -

lllV('!"tnwn t·OWJwd pnwf'r compa nies n' j0c-H~d morw l .t l'~' O ffC'r ~

__..,-.... . . -.. - ·-·---·................-··-···-lo·-CLOIID-1

,.guCIU

RATEI
.... _ _ . .. . .....w · · - ·

The Director of Netur1l
One 30,000 gallon lingle
Resource• reserves the right pedestal aiovatod steel wat•
to reject any or ell bids, or to !Ink together with d1e n8Cl81-

111 OZ. PC
pi oflt cl('rl rlr roo pc rati,·~s were
rormrcl In tilt' !at~ HI:JOs when

JO IUCI Ml AD (Ml·t2-1Ui
MONOA Ylhr1111 J.AI I AJl t. S P.M.
I l._ u.til NOON SANIOAY

$21 .00 made payable to the

We Accept
Food Stamps

SMI"!fiELD

Btis.iness Servic·es

Department of Natural Resources. These may also be
purchased' with cash in the
exact amount. Plans and
specifications become the
property of the prospective
bidders and no refunds will
be made. Additional informltion may be obtained
frOm the Division of Reclamation. Department of
Natural Resollrces, 1 866
Fountain Square, Building

·

Meigs County Fair Board
Rock Springs, Ohio
Btd lor steel building (14x40xl00 ft.).
Clean span. sincle slope. Vd2 inset
gtrts. .
Strai&amp;ht side wall columns, untiorm
beams , uniform bays.
loadinc: ll 30 PSF W l 25 PSF
Roof: 24 aa. steel Alunicoated stand'"' seam.
Walls~ long lite 26 ga. painted steel.
Insulation: 4" vinyl backed white fi·
berglass walls and ceiling.
Eaves: Std. trim on ends and hi&amp;h
stde 8" heavy duty gutter on low
side. 4-6"' down spouts to dram.
End Walls: Standard post and column. 2- I2xl6 frame opening on
each end.
Doors: 3- 3x7 walk with steel clo·
sure and catches.
2- 12x16 overhead fiberglass installed.
Engineering: State approved plans.
Erection: all labor and equtpment.
std wage.
Footer: As requtred by State, w/1"
closed cell styrofoam to 24" below
floor line.
Floor: 6 ba&amp; 6". concrete 6x6 mat., 6
mill plastic. on eravel base. (fur·
ntshed) trowel finish with light
broom. sealed.
Also bldg. 14x401125 same specs.
All bids to be submitted by I2:00
Noon MIJ 4. 1987 io Secretary of
fairboud, P.O. Box 227. Pomeroy.
OH. 45769.

s LB.

The

· Ohio

•
bra nd lshf&gt;d the machete and 111
six great-grandchildren; two sisth ree other tim es at the Btg
ters, Carrie Ehll)a n, Charleston .
Wheel.
Homer J. Bradshaw. 80, .167 W Va. , and Nettlr; Banks, OrJ udy Wells, who worked a t
Grant St . Middleport . died Tues- lando, F la
Fruth Pharmacy when Curley
day at Veterans Memorial
Services · wrll be . Friday ·at l
and his mother were there, said
Hospital.
p.m. at the Kuhn er·Lewls Fun!hat Curley shovf&gt;d his mother
A retlrf&gt;d coal mmer, Mr
eral Home in Oak Hill with the
Int o the blood pressure machine
Bradshaw was bornAug. l0.1906, Rev . Scott Kalis offic iating
and told Mrs. Curley to "get back
at Rutland . a son or the late Graves ide services will be held
Int o the car wher.e you belong,"
.lames Mitchel and Effie Ma c at 3 p.m Friday in Suncrest
The defense team of William
Hysell Bradshaw.
Cemetery m Polrtr Pleasa nt with
Dean Conley and Roderick was
He is sur vived by his wt le. Nola Dr. Leroy Keeney offl ciMin g.
grant ed a motion by .Judge
Shaffe r Bradshaw: fo ur da ugh· Fn cnd s may call at the funeral
Donald Cox to call Det. Mi chael
ters a nd sons· in· law , Lu &lt;'ille and home from 2-4 aM d 7·9 p.m. on
Tucker of !he Gallipolis Pollee
Harold Gilmor e, Pomeroy; Mae Thu rsda.v a t !he funeral home.
Department to the stand.
and Eugene Moll ohan. Sy rac use:
Cox agreed with the prosecuBessie and Jack Holland , Greenlion
that since Tucker had sat
Donald E. Roush Sr.
ville. Ohto, an d Mary and Ron
th rough most of the t r ia l, hP
Jones, Raci ne: a son and
should not be brought to the
daught er in· law, ,\rt and Gloria
Donald Eh tDo nnt el HoushSr .
sta nd. citing that " it was an
Br;idshaw, Pomeroy, and a sis· • 46. Point Pleasa nt . was dead on
aft erthought. "
fer . Neva Moore. Pomeroy . Also
arm•al at Pieasa n! Va lley Hospt
survivin g arc l4 grandchi ldren.
tal on Tuesday .
0 •
lOaDS aVOr
Services will be held at I p.m.
He was born May 2.1. 1940. in
an:e
Friday at the Ewing F unrra l
Henderson, W.Va. , to Opal Roush
--o
Home Wi!h Rev . Odell Ma nley
and lhP late John E . Clonch.
CINCINNATI (UP! I - Three
and Rev Theron Durha m olft·
He was preceded 111 death by
of every four Ohioans st rongly
elating Bu ri al will be '" Miles
his fa ther -in law. Willi a rd
supports ra is ing the state' s
Ce metery, R utlil nd. Friends
Barnet! c.
drink ing agP to 21. bu t many are
may call at thP fun era l home
HP was cmploved bv the C.C
opposed to the federal govern·
from 7-9 thts evenmg and from 2-4
LewJs .Jr Old Town Farm on
ment forcing such a change,
and 7·9 p.m. Thursday.
Ohio Rivt'r Road In Pomt Pl ea ·
accord ing to the latest Ohio Poll.
sa n! lor the past.&lt;lO yea rs.
The poll said 41 perce nt of lh£&gt;
Ada F. Clark
Survtv mg is wife Bar bara
state's res ident s favored raising
the drinking age but oppose
Barnett e Roush of Po m! Plea
federal coercion. while a n add! - .
Ada Fra ncis CJ,u k. 94. Oa k sant; one daughter. Martessa
tiona! :N percent favored raising
Hill. d ied m Oa k Hill Hospital Kelly Roush, Point Plcasa nt ,
the dr inking age and also ap.
Tuesday .
three so ns, John Trav is. Timothy
Lee
Roush.
and
Donald
Ely
prove
the govPrnment mandatShe was born In Wes t Vtr{'!tn la
Hous
h
.Jr
,
al
l
or
Poin
t
Pleasant:
lng
·the
chang£&gt;.
on Sept 22. 1892. to t he lat e
three
s
isters.
Della
Likens
and
Another
24 perce nt opposed
Andrew and Ml nPrvw Green
Brown.
Et leen Likens, bot h of Hend erraisin g the drinking age, and 2
percen t sa id they had no opinion
She wa s preceded in dea th by son. a nd Virginia Btrchh eld,
Poi nt P leasa nt : threc brolhl'rs,
on the issue
hPr hu sba nd J oe Cla rk
Surviving are two daugh ters, Curtis
Roush,Pleasa
Logantn.
Den
Roush, Point
. and
DaellJ. r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiii;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij
11
Mrs Vlck II rene; Deniut of Oa k las Roush. Henderson.
Hill. and Mrs Will ia m ([)ort heaJ
Se rvJces will be Friday a! 11
Str ickl£&gt;n, Poim Plea sa nt , two a. m. In the Wil coxen Funeral
1\rothers, Bo bby J. Clark, Ga lli· Home with !he Hc1. Wtlliam
po lis. and Royal E. Clark. Ba nks offi ciat ing. Burial will be
Clint on; eight gra ndrhlld rcn and in the Lone Oa k-Rogers Ceme·
We Have Lots of Easter Candy at
!Pry in Ga llipolis Fer rJY. Friends
• lleasonable Prices.
C r a n e c o l l a p s e may ca ll ~~ the lun~ra l home
after 5 p. m on Thu rsday.
&amp;

Homer

said

'JFar Cry' to go on .r;ale

for

Area deaths

Wednesday, Aprils; 1987

RUSS MOORE
992-2526 '

1-2·1

LOl l : ChOYII wNt1 ftm .. t 3mo
old .,.. tyr. old molo c -.
8oth h...,t bkM tongue end
mouth. AEWAAO Ph. 114·211·
L~ In ; Acktlton •ea. ameft
bfown end bl.clc dog REW.ARO

304-171·71".
, OUND: 0.. Hound or llustcy
type dog.

•lont Tom·Gitnn Rd.

Ph 11··318· 903..

•

Found. In Llnttvtll., Ohio Fit

124. molo. odlih q , Noodo ~··
'""'"· Medium liae, tong.

hllrod. • - fOld oo&lt;er wilh
on ..... Co~ et 4-742·
2130 afternoont

-

117,7•7toSI3,41t
ye•. now Nrinel Call Jobllne
t ·511-45t· 3U&amp; Ext. A·1311
D. for lnlo. 24 hrs
EXCELLENT WAOES for 11&gt;110
tlm1 aaHmbty work: M.aronlet. Cf ilftl Othtrt . Info 104541 -0091 EXT. 307.1, 7 d..o.
CALL NOW.

�..
•

•

&lt;
.

.

.

11 . Help W•nted

' ,

. EXCELLENT WAGEs' For tPM't

Ume ntembty work; el~rvn·
Jet. ettftt. Others, Info tiM)

-o~

,84l -0081.•eat. 3117. 7 d.,..

61 Houaehold

SWAIN
AUCTION • fURNITURE 12

AVON. no twvict
ttrritorllt . phone

1428.

OMwtSt., GallipoP1. New6uHd
wood-cot! al0111tt, 0 pr. wood LR
IUitt &amp;399, bunk Net. I 1$9,
reclin•• ntw It uMd btdroofn
sul_t n, wrin911t w ..hau, It
shott. New HYinlJroom 1uh11

Ttltvltlon Advtrtltlng-Netd
high
1*'1011 for the Pt
Plt. .nt artt: potliblt future
m1n1g1mln1 ~rtunt1y. b•t
phae comm~111on . experien~ In
..,..tting ul" prtfwred, 304--

••vv

1189·0181. Iampo. Cell 61444&amp;·3158.

822·0304.

12

County Appl'-'ct. Inc. Good
uud appliance~ end TV Htl.
Open BAM lo IPM . Mon thru

Situations
Wanted

Sot. 114·441-'1519. 127 3rd.

Avt. Otlllpolit, OH .

Htvt room In Prlvttt Cefl Home
fot 2 tldtflv ~1..-.tt. ReMOn•
bte ratH. 15 yr. txPwltnct.

··~

8peclll dlett. Good Ctrt. Call

Vlllty Furniture, new 6 uMd.
Large tectlon of qu1lity furnitun . 1211 Etuern Ave. ,

....

Oalllpollo.

... · 'S.IN

I 1"'211·1108.

0000 USED APPLIANCES
Wnhtrl, drytr1, refrigerttou.

Nted tom..,.,, to teac:h tr1
to prh'nlrY IV' ttudent.

'"ton•

Mill in Cltt
Box
T-0317, 82&amp; Third Ave. Gtllipo·
Tri~¥Jnt,

Ill, Ohio 41131.

TelevisionViewing

lt"tl pmt tibia with .,...
botltd ltckgemmon • ch. .
board- 4 - """"' 1100.

Alto Ping Pono Ctlll14-441-3t34.

075.00

•

Slgno, 1-304-521·4834.

1:00 CD 1111 Valley

aw 111 a(J)
iiJJ Newl

66 Building Suppllea
Buitdtng Met trials .

old•~ people.
24 hourt ctre. 20 v••• e~tp•
rltnct. AtiiOI'Itblt riiM. Cell

31

Homes for Ssle

...

anytime, l1.t·l49·3014.
Will care for eld.,ty lldy In ""f'

homo. CoM I 14-892-1831.
Schoola ·
lnatruction

16

Retrain Now. Southllttern8ut·
innt Colltgt. Calf 014· 440·

43e7.

3 BR .. rtcrettion room , kitchen,
dining room, llfg8 front •nd

btck porch. llll10wooden bu 1'ld •
ing, ytrd with chtin link ftnce.
Rustle Hilll, Syrtcutt, Ohio.
11.t-948 · 2910 betwtsn 94p .m. G14·912·15888tfltr4:00
p.m.
Anumtbltlaan, 3 bedrooms, 1
bdh. fMnUy room with wood
burner, tltln kitchen. ctntrtltlr.
1 VJ ltvll ecrH, mutt 1111 rtkK:at·
~ · cen tfttf 4:00, 304·87&amp;·

10.

I

.

'

ltbyllltlng

I 10 cell GIH1bum Cleenlng
ltrvillt 814· 318-1027. Ae•o·
ntble Rlt•. Rettrenc.. on
rtqYMt.

32 Mobile Homes
for Ssle :

Cll'l Ph. 814·«8-2750.

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY
Will blbyth ntnlngt • wee- MOillE HOME SALES, 4 MI.
kOftdo Ctlll14-371-2110
WEST, OALUPOLII. AT 31.
PHONE 114-441·7274.

Will do llghl heullng, ltwn
mow.,. r~PtW tnd 10mteutomo·

1Btl Skyline. 47• 10. 02400.
thto woril. CoM 114-n2-2313 Ctlll14·441·0380.
or 114-742-3011.
14x1b 1178 Kirkwood 3 bdr .• 2
btth'l, txltl nlc.. O.s hMI, frH

Tutoring M'tllabtt. 4-7. ti.OOt7.00 hr. O.ptfldlng on toe•
tlon. 114-742· 2081 . Atk tor
A....

delivery, bloclotd up. t8810.
Colli I 4-441-0171.

Huebend snd Wilt will do tprlng
houM clttnln8 and V"d WDtk.

1872 Fltmlngo 12xe5 3BR. 1 'lo
beth, tottltltct. CA. 8•1 0 dtck
&amp; 3x5 deck, undtrplnni,., eomt
furnllhlngs . Aekirig ••9915.00

1'11. 114-241-9147.

I llldlll: ldl

0508.

1311. ltby mtttrootn 135 •
•u ltd " • - 120. 130 •

3 bedroom mobile home, g.,dtn
IPIC:e, kidt, no p811, 304-451·

1177 mobile hom•. 1211110, d
tloctrlc:. U.IOO.OO. 304-178-

12d5 Schultr on 1 •crt lot.
Fumlthtd, outbulldino • llttllltt dltc . .._rv• flun . 112,500.

Busineu
Opportunity

304-171-2182.

113acrH - 1.3 mil• off St. At.
I NOTICE I
17, 1181 14•70, 3 bedroom
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH- mobile
home. large mtchlntrY.
ING CO. rtCOmmtrutt thtt you
.. thtd, 35 terti, PlltUrl,
do butlnHt wh'h peoplt you CIU
38 ecr•• mttdow, baltnce

knaw, and NOT to tlf'ld mont'¥
t..ough the m.. untl you heve
lnvntfv.ald the offering.

Own your own Jtan Sporttwur, LadiH tpperel,
ment, chHdrtns·mtt.,.ily,
elut , pttlu, dtnctwur. .oblc. brid .., llng•le Of ICCft·
IIOritl ttora. Jordtcht. Gitana,
Cttvln Kl ..n. lerglo V81ante,
Evan lltcont. U1 Cl81boft, Clttolin .. HealtMe• Oftt' 1000 oth"'· 114,800 to e2e. toO lnventorv. trtlnlng, fhtlurH, grand
opening ttc. C.n optn 18 dayt.
Mr. Ktantn 30•-178-3131.

••o•

Own your own Jttn ·
lpo,.nrttr. Ltdln Apptrtl,
Mtnl. Chlldrtnt· mtttrnlty.
LMt• liz••· Petltt, Otnctwurtll'oiMc, 8rklll, Ungrlt Of ICCN·
tori• ltort. Jordtcht, Oltano,
Ctlvln Klein, Strglo """""·
Evan Picone, Lb. Claiborne,
Glsollna, H..lthttl OVII' 1,000
othert. t14,100 to t28,100
lnvtntory . tfllnlng, flltUrtt ,
iftnd o'*'lng, ttc. Ctn op.n 1 e

d.. t . Mr. Sidney 14041252·
4418.
U .99 ONE PRICE SHOE

ITOAEI Optn tllhll" 1 shot or
f111ldan non·frlnchi•• star• with
tht Ub.ny Flthionl tdvanttt•·
Ovtr 1.300 bttnd nJI ,,ft, On•
tlmt f". lnwntory, fhllurtl.
buying tflp, tupC)IIn, lnttott
trMnktg tnd mort. Ctlltny dmt.

timber, 2 pon;ds, aprin ... crou
fencH. Mu1t relocttt, 30.tlnctll5· 30150.
1 9&amp;.t two bed room mobite
homt, l.11.t5, completely lur·
nl1htd. contolt color TV. porch
tnd undll'ptnnlng. 11t tnd Horton It , Muon , W. Vt .
t2,000.00 fir~ . Only int•nttd
pertont clll 304· 773·1471 .

1184 SkyHnt mobllt homt
1.t.1110, tote! tltc:trlc, 2•6 ,,.,..
rior wallt, 2 br, 1 btth with
a•den tub. ft. den. 30.t-87&amp;·

1317.

2 yttr old. 1211118 tdd • room.
with wtlk In clottt, •2.100.00.

304·882·3334 oflor 5:00 PM.
33

Farms for Sale

l lh Acr"· Modtfn houst. bern.
huntlnp. lordtrl WtYnt Fonttt.
131.000. Lind Contrtct· qutlifltd burar PI\, &amp;14·379·2144.
20 •cr• '""" Htnnan Trsct
Ao•d. Glenwood . W . Vt. fiH'
mOt'elnformllion ctl1304· 773·

5111 or 773-1181 oflori:OO.
34

c••

Homltown pwaontl
Have
vtCtn"'t for tdvh c••· Pfof•·
lktntl employt,f l In 3 working
ohllh. Cell e14·182·e&amp;U or

Business
Buildings

114·848·2827.

Julia'• Pertonal Cart Home hM
optrdng for ..dtriy p.11~11 , 24
hour
f.mily butin•• tlnce

p••·
1111. 304-n3-1173,

"A Uttle Dttlgn" , lnl... k»r ft.
1lgn butlnttt for J*&gt;Pit on

budget. lndtpllldOfttlv
owntd. 304-171-1135.
llm~td .

44

Apartment
for Rent

175-5108.

•n.

114-446-0322.

1 Bedroom b•ic rent 1171.00
plue electric. Also required •
UOO.OP eteurlty dtPOtlt. CON·
TACT: Jtck10n Ettat• Dept. Ph
448·3997 Equ11 Hou1lng
Furnlthtd • unfurnlthld epu.,
1110.00 and up. ref.,..,cet Ph.

304·175· n38 or 304-1715104 A· 1 Rt.. E1t1t1.

15 Court Strttt, 2 BA, H 11
btth1, w t w cerptt, complete
modem kltch ..... a• htlt, well
lntultltd, wired for pMnt &amp;
ctble tv. apadDUI, parking In .
rear, patio, U78/ mo. plus
utHhlll. Dtpo~h , Aet . . .cn
requlrtd. No pete. Call814·441·

4828.

Furnllhed Efficiency .

•no.

UtHitl11 pd. Single. Sh.-e btth .

807 2nd. Gtlllpolll. Call 4.t84411 lfttr 7pm.
.
fum . Rtf. 6 Dtp. 1 or 2 tdultl

only. C.ll814-448·0338.

Mol~htn
CH, Rt. 7

I'll .

Furniture • AppHan·
North Glllpollt, Ohto

614-446-7444. lpc. Wood

Living Room Sultl &amp;398.00.

Coppflftont rtff'l9trll0f' t95,
hiWYttt gold r.trlg••tor t115,
tldt by 1ide refrigwatOt' t115.
whht 2 dr. rtpfrlgttltor t75, 18
cu. ft. ch"t ''"'" t1 eo.
Whirlpool w•thtr •as, Mavt•o
wtther •175, GE:Mthtt t1&amp;0,
tlectr~ ••no•top • bottom
oven ·t110. Mevma wrlngll'
wether t95. end 52 glllon hot
we. . hitter Ill . lk119t Appliance., Upper Rivtr Rd. 11··

Fumilhtd u,....,,, 2 roome a
blth, utlitltt furnilhtd. ciNn .
No ptu. Aduttt. Ctll 014·441-

1518.

Country Uving. 1 BA fum'Bd
apt . AC. w'11her tnd dryer, no
chMdrtn or pftl. ref a dep
req'ed. Cell 114-912·2807. ,,.
ttr IPM.

3214.

Tapptn electric counter-top
ranee wtth top oven. Cell

Antiques

•u
1-e00-433- 784

Old Orltnlel Rugs Wanted! Any
or condJUon. Ctll toll tree

7.

64 Mlac. Merchandise

o-..,

Ceilthen's Used Tlre Shop.
1,000tirll, lilet12. 13, 14,16,
11, 18.1. 8 miiH out Rt. 218.

Unfumlthed upsttlrs tpt. Adult•
onty. No Pttt. Utllhl• fuml1htd

114·992· na7. EOH.

1 bedroom tptnmll'lt In Mldctl•
port, •II utllhin plld. 1210. p•

Htmsttrt 11 .2&amp;, Htmtttr It
complete 111 up ...00. 2
Gerb ... tnd Mt ups •8.00.
Afobtlfed Dane •100. Ph.

114-441-1314.

E•••• Bunnlea 'putt bred Ntthlfltnd Dwtrfs . Great fvf 4-H
C111 &amp;1•·441· 0804 efter 4pm.

AkC Regittered Chihuthul
pups. 8wk1. old Cell 114·446-

ne&amp;.

218-1021 .

Groom and Supply shop·P•t

Grooming . All breeds ... AII
styln . Julie Webb Ph. 114-c.t8-

0231.

Engllth Sttt1r, ROflllltrtd, good
hunting dog. Will wtll or trtdt
fDr gun. Ctll 114-949-2544.

r.p

both ptrentl tnd
from
litter. CtH 114- 13-14t9 or'

114·e96·1317.

Old Enalllll &amp;http doG pupp;oo.

EVANS ENT£RPRISES, Jtdl·
oon, Oh. 114-218-5830.

The Arbuckle Church Aide ..
now talttnv ordtn for hom•
mldt Elltlf Eggt. A I or. tvu
tor t1 . 00. Choc:olllt CO·
\lllred fltvOrt tre; chocolttt,
cocorw..t, peenut bu1ttr, meple
nut, chtrry, 6 cherry nu1 . CtH

H"'

•
Frui~

58

8t Vegetables
8 &amp; S Product now open 11 our
new locttlon 131 3 E..ttm A\ftl.
Gtlllpolle, ecro11 from Pizra
Hut. l'a ltltctlon Outlity Fruits
end ~tgeublea . OPEN

EVERYDAY.

Another trucklotd thaN l•tt
ftmous Ltltt Onlltrio eppl•. ltv•
'41rittl... Vlnt ripe tomttott,
SOc pound. Jtdl '. Mlrket,
Routt 35. Htndtnon.

69 For Sale or Trade
1HB City Aluminum Dump
Tttiltr 30ft. 197• Ooctgt D-800

111.

2811-152 ' .

3010 John Detre Tr•c:tor with
load• 1431C1:'John Deere Plow
t300. John O.tre Trtntport
Dltc 1100: John Dt•e 2150
gtllorl sprtytr t271. Ph. 11•-

ZBI-1522.

8N fot'd Trtctor txctlltnt lhept.
2-12'' 3pt. Plowt. 2 Manure
tpreMtrt,
1ty1 tcrtptr
3pt. Aoto THitr Lawn Mower.
20-20 Cotttr Air ChMgtr. 2- 2
wfletl tttllen. Ala Gr8Jidl Ph,
614·246·5135 Chtrllt Mil•.

tm..

Utility Buildlno. 30x40xl.
t4875. lncludtt; 1••9 tHding
door, 3ft. 0 ln. 11eel wtlk•door,
28 go. ptlnttd otto! tiding_. 2~
ga. Otlvtlume roofing, 20
w.rranty. Compl..t conttn.tCI·
liqp ., .~q"t..:'fittm•· .lu1111tre.
llltlltrit: Ohio. 814-582-21137.

v••

3\o!! HP rototill• for

lt. t150.

Q. .

Compt111 115 Multtflil lnteriof.
t121. 1tttSmhhTourchsm.-y
1110. a... WOOdburntt
t100. MttlcCh.rOven, 2Tr.ant
one 1181 Chevy tnd 1179 fot'd

•••r••
I'll .

Troy luHt

Tl'"· ltn-D-100

8031E.....,..._

114-441·4412.

Crib bed, pleypen, 'lnl.,t ctr·

tttt, pony choir. Cll 114·388·
8301.

I IIIII S,I ll lilt' \
,', lr v,, 1111 k

Tony' I Gul) R~rs. hot r.btu•

Ina. Open t :OO AM to 7:00PM .
Cell 304-171-4131 .

Wentld to buy toNcco poun·
dtgt ln MHon' .County, 304-

61 Farm Equipment

Live~tock

63

Duroc lo.,., Ired Jutt llkt lht
boert we tnted It th• Ohio
Ttttttion thtt gtfned Om' 2.1
11&gt;1. par cloy. Rogw hnlley.

Stblnt, OH. 113·184-2388.

lot .4-&amp;•cr.. mot•l .... 5 mlln
frDm chy..llmlts. ftt . 218. C.ll
814· 441· 2410 aher 4pm.

12.885.00 firm . 304-1714B11.
1980 Bulcll lkyltoll. 2.1 V-8
engine, Ill power, oc cond, high
......... 304-175-7371.
1171 Ctdtllic, good cond,
t1.800.00. 1:00 tm-2:00 pm
304-e75-ZNII or 4:00·8:00

MACK TrectOt' '78, dbt frtmell
'718tnton 30"•H•• clump. II"
rubber owrel. [Reed¥ to work.

WHI ... •-f1tly. 814-25..
1130.

1181 Chovy C-10. ..,o, tlr.
cru.... dual gnllls ee111. John1
Au\o Ill•. lulwllt Rd. Cltl._
pol~.

Ohio.

t1288 ""· 114-281-1122

Oood •tlectlon of D"""' and

11nDodl0'14ton. PI, PI, 311
fouo ...... 1117
o-,:~.,:s· P8, 318 lour optttl
over
lona bod. I ·304·H5·

Bt.cldine botrt. Rot• a.,.,ley
Soblnt, 011 1'11. 113·11N·Z381.
Alto remember Bentley Ptg left 3013.
April 29, W•hlngton Court
Hou• F•lrpoundt 7:30 pm.
1869 Chowy pld&lt; up, 3 tptttl.
Full blooded Simment.a bul, lOR

""· 814-44e·4202.
66 Seed

Attlton buHdlna tott. mobile
homH ptrrnltttd, Clyde Iowen,

WITHOUT . F~M

a

.ANP VoiD!f
HQW, Z~N.

.f.""' l'lo

7:36 Cll Hot1aymao111r1
1:00 (D Kingdom cr...ma Little
Davkl 'a Adventure
W iiJJ Highway to
HaaMtl A pesky old dog
holds the key to flndlna auto
wreck victims. (R) 0 ·
Ill • (I) Plffecllllnngan
Larry face1 loss of ba11ball
chlmplonahlp or Josa of
frlendahlp. (A) 1;1
Cllllmlllt-'"" WOfld Past
worlds of Latin Amerlcen
wtrtara are drlmaflcally

e

304-171-2388 or 11 .
. ,._,
2414.
• ":~..,_________
r-f:.:.

-

Fetty

.,~

Troo T - ..., .::"..:";

_ , ,_Ctll304·17l-1331 . ~_::~

--

••P•

RINOLE~s~··=·~E;RVICE.
rltnetd
tiOCiridM, : .

' """'II- ··

...,.,_)
roo11na 304- .
.. 1'71-7147.
. -

·-IICied. Q

ill) • • ROalt

Rottrv or cllble tool drllln• •• ·
Mottw.llt comptttldtem•day.

Pump ..... and

881-3802

llll Roblrl - n M ist
and Naturallat
11J Pri-1 wrap ups of
the doy's world news and In
depth faaturo reports. (1 :00)
1R1 'Chlafa, Plfl 2' Prime
Time (NR)
(l) MOVIE: lfflfon Doflor

304-

lltVict.

Otlvotllnd .......... culvert. : ' '
12.31 II .. up. AH tlou. flt1......'. ' ,
Ftbrlelllon.Oo l""'hl~ • "·
within 110
Wll .not bti -: ;...
undtftokl. 304t·l21·5211 . \ - 1

:J.:.

a

lraltl (1 :48)

~4~

Concrtta flnWI, parldng tolt; ....• ~·
b......... . ony- jab. Ienior
'
ChRid! lltrfltld.

a
P.st F,..,

'""

1o
llquld CM'

ianempll
• a aTalla
Five Monty
reconciliation with

w"""""
J,..
d ·h- :

hlo pel Andy, to nb avail.

1:00 CD 700 Club

.....
iettlon·t
end ""'wllh- ·
ltump
r - tl tii[WI-

i1JJ 111g11t Coull Dan
lito comiiOHin the hOapltal:
hla trfanda walt for a
roapon11.(A)
(i)
(I) Dyneaty Blake and
Kryetta dlsparallfy Mirth
for kkli!IPI*I Krysdna. Q
til llll Lyndon Jot)tJohnaon rettaclt on hi• IHt
and cei'HI' from hfa eer1y
childhood In Teaos to his
triumphant and ultimately
tragic pttaldlney, In this one
m11n lhow.

• (D

out ltwn dtmtgt, For complete ;

2142 or 171-2103.

•

'

a

MIOEAIT IUILDEA8, c.,_t,
new home conv.c1or1.
Mt1011, W. Yo. 304- n3-8184
CM' New Haven, W.Yt. 304-1122341. Paint. wells •s "· homt
tlplirt, fir ; I 1. ehlmneyt.
brick ........ potlot, bloclc. lid•
end

-·

wtlk and dfNewevt.

82 ,

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

•o

llll
Mallftum, '·'·
Megnum'a former wHe

..

tn1nllte ller daughter to hla

•

CARTER'I ~LUMIINO
AND HEAnNO
Cor. Fourth end Pint

MORTY MEEKLE AND W~I.:..NT.:..H:.:..R_O_P_ _ _...:...., ....----''----....:.....----,
BWT(AY MOM v.t:X.Ii...Ot.J'TJ.ET
. I W1&gt;8 GOING 10 GiiVE
TOO&lt;&gt;-Y 16 Ml95

. • ••

Clt~.Ohlo

-

Phont 114-441'· 3111 or t14-

44e-4477

HER THE 6E6TPR~T

AACKAeERR'fS
BIRTHDAY.

ME STAY l&lt;l'&gt;\e FfPI\ SCHca.••

! COULD 'THINK OF.. ·

Electrical
Refriger1tion

"

Motorcycln

#

Sttd corn tor ..... O.!ittlb 1M
Kenworthy, 304-871· 1806.

1182 Hondt CB 710 U20
miJt1, loaded. exceltent conc.ft.

]f,lliSpilfl.illllll

~·

Ctll 614-448·0122 "'"
B6

2111-4113.

71

Autos for Ssle

1112 Ford Thund•blrd, tuto.,
whh M. 10,000 mil•. Ytry

goodeond. CoM 114-ZH-1117.

Gener1l H1uling. • : •

Dlr111h 1184 Hondo XR-100

1111 ..,.u., Quod Spon .,.....
-lon 11700 or bttt
oHtr. Pll. 614-44e·2235.
1178 710 Ktwlll. .lgood eondillon . . .10. Extro'o. 114-HII4274.

1ta1 Chwylmptlt.4·- . .\C.
1884 Hondo teo Nle"' tit tt•lng - · CtUitt. AM· tNt
. . 2,100 miN, e.IIC COfHI..
FM. Good
12700.00
t1.100.00. ,.,.. 304·171·
""· • 1~441· 2113.
1113.

-ion

Jr. 304·171·2331.

WHI~E

•

OMitrd W•• . . _, l'oclo " · .
Cltwnt, W.... Dethlery Anji ,, ....
time. Cell 11'"441·7404-Nd '.

.................

.:.

I

R I R Wt1or hrvleo. f!ooll\.~ ··
clttem1, -.tts, pools ~·
Formerly

VO'RE NOT DOIN'
AN~~HING, ~w ··LET'5
M~ AN' YOU CLEAN UP
THIS MESSY

I WAS JUST FIXIN'

10'60

I

AT LEAST HE
CLEANED UP
HALF OF IT

til MOVIE: Houdfnll
II])Newe

a (l) UIA Tanlglrt

- . ,.
:~

J.J.

11:00CD Hetdcaetllllftd
McCannlclt

.,.....

w... Sorvtct. S-Ing

"'· • (D

114-2411-8211.
·· · - • - ·· Cell
Will htul -!rig fnim 2 ton ,.;,

41

for Anomil'fl, Aeeountant, etc.
Ia Court HouN. Ctl

cto.

Houaea for Rent

...... -tlful J IR homo. 47
woodlid tCf'M. Mtilt local.
Cherry Ridge. 144.100. Col
114-HZ·7110.
for_by_:2ttoryhouoo
in Mld.IPDrt onrtnlltng ,...

311 yr. .......... vlnrlo -

..
1\llooth.lllllquo

w
·w•-·
woodwortl. 114-•2·1121.
_

..... - " " " ' I I .

fU·...., Dall ' ...., tea ~
.-.y. lltpaulnlant. c.IIOI-

--llot.

117.·10110 hi. OH.·IIOI for

2 t £oom hoUit In CNfton.
..... - - 111,000 to

.....
................... ,,.
li4.000. -

3 bdr. rend!. Rodn.. Vlllogo II. .f .;-:-__;;..:..:;.;.:,~:---­
t211 mo. pluo dt!&gt;Oolt· RO!trtn· COUNTRY MOillE Homo Por~
Oft ......td. C.U lltcl&lt;bum
ROUII 33, Nonll of Pom«oy.
Rttlty 114·441·0001.
Rtfttll tr-1. Col e14·H2·
r:UMIIMd one fOOm co~~
ntwty redtcarettd.

0.:...":'".1:
enoughforontortwotdutta.

Rtf. I doto· r....... CoM
114-441-2143.
ptbo .

3 bod.- houH. -~ CoiiHn·
bit. t110.00montllplutdopotlt
tnd •tit
304-771-1140.

to-.

·?

708.

175·3030 Ot 171-3431 .

Sptn tor ..m, trMW tpHtt,
Locvttftd, Rt. 1. Point,.._..,,

304-171·1071.

fNt lot .... -

-win,_"'"·

Alll·fM
,..... Awto .......... fW .•

IUDOnT:au: I I Wl u.&amp;l.

c -.... - ... CoM

49

For leaN

, . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ldloom

..... Ctlll14-44e·1014.

....

- . ....
-·
IlL tlr,T.,Alll;ni,
.
• ......
,t, ...
•:t I
110.100 Ph. 11._

H7·- ·
1-11•
- -toM.
lwteMII
....tacJ!IIeM

- C o l l 1 4 - - -.

:=.::-:.~~-~

....., .. Col ,, .. ,.,..
1220. 1·304-1111-11711.
U..:.A ...._.Tt

'r£:
I I

c.

Alll ..lltl
,.........
.. If ....
141'11''1 c.l .,... ~

--f--..............
1171--.

·~~-a' J a 110.10. JIM.•·

JUl.

.-.·
.· 1,000
w--.
-.
or 2.000 p .
·-

(0:30)

TO

c- .

II ;I I 1, lt. fl1 . 7,
City, 011. 114-211-1410. be. '

...

.

Allerl aounltY· (R)

.

g ....... '·'· Almoll
~

IN

ICE

TASTES

,_.....,.
aaJiAII"- "'""•
t2:00 alllumll IIIII A11111
(J)~(R)

.

1;;:::&amp;.,...

-~~·~·~·~17~·~-·4~;f~·~4~f~..i.~f~r·;.! w•: ·:':~:
.. ...

• .......... UvaEmory(1and
Klrllll1 Lildqufat,
:00)

II

a;'t "t! ,

.......

_. _ _u-. • . . . he

I'

'aCII

~

~··,.·

GET .\NSWER'

YESTIIDAY'S ·SCIAM·II1S ANSWIIS .
Wholly- Owner- Knack - Drow&amp;y- KNOW WHY
Precocious fllll grader to teacher: "I know that two and two
le tour. l)uat want to KNOW WHY."

r------,.---.,

BRIDGE

NORTH

1·1·11

+KJ !2

.K 7l

James Jacoby

t73

+A Q10 7

Opening light
has its price

WEST
+987 5 4

EAST
• Q to

.85

.AJ62
t K Q tO 9 2

tJ8 54

+u

• 52

By James Jacol!y
I've always liked openin.g the bidding light. There's a little larceny even
in honest souls. and we take diabolical
satisfaction In stealing a hand now and
then. But there can be a price to pay In .
opening light.
South overcalled East's liRht open·
ing with two clubs. That got North ex ·
cited , so he cue·bld two diamonds . AI·
ter bids ol two hearts by South and
three clubs by North , South declded
that his fulll4 hilh-card points jusll.fled goina further . Since he controlled
diamonds with his ace, he eletted the
nlpe-trick no-trump game. When dia ·
monds were led, declarer re1retted
'not being in five clubs. Although mak·
ing 11 tricks In clubs mlght require
guessing the lOcation of the heart jack,
the wont result would be one away . In
fact, five clubs could always be made
by an elimination play. (Strip out
spades and clubs; then throw the opponents on l~ad with the second dla·
mond .) In the actual nO-trump game, a
losing ·spade finesse might result In
down two or three.
Declarer won his diamond ace and
ran off five rounds of club5. East, the

SOUTH

+AG

• Q10 g 4
tA6
+KJ986

Vulnerable: North-South
Dcaier: East

Ea11
It

Wtll

Norlb

Pass
Pass
Pass

zt

Paa

3+

Pus

Pass

P1ss

Opening lead:

+4

L----------...J
opener, discarded the six, two and jack
ol hearts. while West discarded a dla·
mond and two small hearts. When
South next pl~yed the ace of spa~.
East played the 10, poiBibly a fal&amp;ecard . However, East apparently had
started with K·Q of dlamondland A·J
of hearts for .. la opening bid. Wouldn't
he be likely to have the spade queen u
well ? That was the view taken I»'
South, who rose with the spade king,
dropping E~t's queen and makln1 hla
game .

It, THOMAS JQSEPH
ACIOSS 37 Food fish
1 Cbe&amp;~man· 38 "Alfie" star
5 Altumu· 39 Wrangler's
latlon
charge
9 Olive
40 Soviet
genua · river
10 611(o.polnt 41 Buffalo
type
of India
12 Set In
DOWN
&amp;&gt;lace
1 Station

13 EUnililate

Gump's

2 Alaskan
native
3 Non·
prophet
agency?

wife

4 Cole

11 E~tlan
king

18 Andy

17 Get - Qf
18 W1ming

20 Publica-

tlon (al.)
21 Of the
dawn

II EnsJiah

rlver
13 Routine

t

.....
YeeterdaJ'• Anlwer

8 Lena
Home hit
11 French

27 Yellow
Dower
29Rigg or

resort

R01111

14 Threshold 30 Memorize

•

16 Aliment
341celandlc
ohong
19 Libertine
writing
II Contralto 22 Anklebqnea 36 RU81111an
Anderson 24 Fork prong
space
8 Emiaeary 25 Drooping
station
1 Uncle or 26 One kind 37 Shinto
weapon
of Kid
temple

-..--,........r-

..

24 Playing

marble
Z5 French
parish

prleat

2'7 Dossier
18 Herbert
Hoover's
wife

29 Negation
31 Hockey
great
3ZChemlcal
· ending
33 Golfer's

a5ft!~fe

Simon
methlm

DAJI;Y CRYPIOQUOI d - Here'• bow to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW

.

One Jetter stands for another. ln this sample Ais used
for the tliret L's X for the two O's, etc. Single letten,
8POIItroPhel, the iengu, and fonnatiDII ol the words are all
hints. Eich clliy the code !etten are dlff~rent.
CIYPTOQUOTE

N1g111 Mil c Ill~ Affalra
lllllllliQfld with ........

SORit'r' WE DON'T IIA\'E
~ 1101' CHOCOLATE FOit
'IOU TO DIIHK IT 11'1 ...

"• • c_. c...,__.

1 \ 4 - - -. o,a. ........
4:10. . .. 1:10'10 1:10.-0W. '
-'\1 I 11i1L

by filling in the mi~ing words

you de~t~elop fr om !tep No. 3 b elow.

aiD'UIJtw'CIII.III

PEANUTS

_

Q

AR••n JaU

packed apor1l hlghligllll with
- CltatiH lnd Jim Huber.

I

-171-2241.

Upholatill'y

(I) ........

0 lporta , ....... ActiOrt

1

~

........,
•

IMdtftdgrftlll . . •utdl, phont

87

Comple1e 1he chockle quo1od

UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE lETTERS

Current

(I) IDOfla()allllr (L)
(i) WKitP Ill Cllleballll
(f) All

.,_.__ ..........&gt;.!I

I

.
,

'
I

1 ,., Now

=-:·
. ~;;=::::..
.... •::.::r::i"...:li-~·=71-=ii31~10~
........... TIS Otdt
, . . c...o ...... ......

, -

2.000- - .. - -: ,.
etc. call 304-17tt ,,
Z81t.
•
pooft ......

fOf~ lllen 'M

111 •o
'

on world oconomlcs
lll1d flne...a.i with Lou
Oollbl ' (0:30)
dlttoiNJiitOOntt'l
a&lt;D II'A'I"H
11 :30•&lt;Jl eiHi 11 Ce~tat~

renonlblt tttft, ..............~~:

-

Glllllll, ()No.

· -

r

1'11. 114-441·7012.

._...._

171-3073 """1:00PM.

114-NI-2112.

21R Moblt Nome In EwwF••

Coli

...,,,,_-ion
ond....

Wonted 10 _

I 0110 2 8R mobile homo. Cell
814-841-2424.

1JMat

S-·--loltlo&lt;

47W•nted to R1nt

42 Mobile Homea
for Rent

Oldt01o~llo

(I)

MoM•

report~

•
21 It , _
Hau• coli, ..._101~ end'""
I'
H~. - .. I
"·
Do1
ton
ond ""·
Jim Ltn'-. 304-171-1247 or
Cutluoi
•·
- - Collll4--·n71. 175-1317.
.I

... --.-lllwfor
1111
w-._,.,ph.
114-371-2114.
1111

2 tnd 3 ~ 1Etroom hou ... 304.

, .--.n~o

"' - " ' · • .... Nih
It 1 ilttl II U4.000. Col

fi4-Hz.711J,

114·441·3844.

0

IH7
· 110

Wtltmtn Rttl Ettt.. A....cy.

~....,.:,::...;;.l"'s:..,:l;.'_:;l....:.,,--l C)

llll ,.,. 'llftllfr

....~ng .
=w=-.-..-•.:.,.-o-. :.,-::
w:-.-,.,-H"'o_u_ll-n'll-i:-i 1:

·-tit.
--Driwt.-.

Office Spece for Atnt. hctltnt

home -84 Mill Crt .. St . ·

Ollllpollt. t11,100. MokooH~r.
c.HI14-441-ZS:SI.

......... _ _ .... _ 3
- - m o t o &lt;. t71. C.I
114-1'12· n1s .

111 •

(f) Ill Uvn

c.•

Hom•• for Sale

Mutt Mil newly - t d 1bdr.

10:110 (I) MOVIE: Tile 1111 Lltl!l
(NA) (1 :38)
10:30 CD""' toen . . . . , _

llll'telllll' HCIIt (A)

8 ton. RtiiCH tbtt dtMv.
114-4tl -4111 MOrning oi' ·..

31

II)) Newa
• (l) Odd Couplo

lemt rtlts. Ctll 304· 1~_;

1370.

r--.

a

YARD

~

Jamtl....

l

cera. (A)
IIJ LI!Yy Kina Uvel In depth
fniiiVIewi wilh top
newemekara ond celtbrltlea.
1:30 (D Q) Tile
10:00. (D 1111 Tile ..... zoo An
outtpoken prlttt llldt 1
pro!Nt lgllfnlt birth control
dflpenllry.
(i)
(I) Mll1lll Aaverand'a
wlft ·in11111 hi tblndon vls~s
to AIDS atriel&lt;en lnmattt. Q
illl • • "-1oft Knlgltll
Lundy 11nQ u Fll/nma each
aulf)tCI ""' of cozylng
up tot con. Q
.
IIJ!.....,.HewaAwrapup
of today' a news ond • look
ahltd to tomorrow's news
atorlta. (1 :00)

a

•

StttHho Dllll Srotomo 1110 I
11010 ln-td Coli e14-441-

when the

of 1M Cllll

1:30 (i) • (I) -

Servlci:

lttrllll Trtt end Llwn

.

1:05 (I) MIA --~

D-.
114·891·44e4.

3107.

74

II)) J4ff...ono
(l) Tao Cfo11 for CQmforl

~~~':.,:'.':,: ,~cz~~ :r.{

8t

1tn1

Roomt for ,..,,, d.y. wettl,
month. O.lit Hotel. Ctn t1•·
448· 9715. Atnlll tow11 t120
mvnlh.

...

ill Wltaaf of Forluna
IIJ Coeaeflre (0:30)
• a 1111 Jaopardyt

T•l•vl•ion ••m
;»ic~ - ~

AoN·s

84

114-8111-3110 onydmt.

lit Fertilizer

•

a (I) Judge

'

work: lnt.-lor, en.to
. r, _~
.A.;
doling. pointing. roofing. ~~
tttimltn. Clll 114·441·11.711r:'"' ....•-:
"
.

1428.

W.. ted IO ltne tob.ceo bttt

..

~~;;~;;;;-.~~~
-~
~
All 1ypta cerpanltr • CD~i~~

t -.

1172 FOf'd Econo Uneven. ecyl.
3 lp.eed with tool bin1. t450.

-

.1

v.....,.,...-

ptinted . all good cond ,

txceltnt condfdon. Ph. 11•·

Furnished Roome

Wlttrprooflng.

tretendlewnc. . cel1304-l71:

1en Ford Coultr plcll-.. INck.
4 eyl. &amp; tPttd. hn lett model

Excellent condition.
2 Horu ulld uail• wMh new motor.
11410.
814·H2-1311
orl14·
tlrn, oood pllnt, rtedyu for uH
182-IIB2 .

1 br aptrtmant, penty fumithtd.
Htndtnon. t 110. month. C. II

46

1979 Tr•n• Am. tnalne tnd
tttnarrtllllon llbuih, new dutch,
....sure plata and throw out
beering . Ntadt ptlnttd

SWEEPER and AWirlt mtchlne.
repM, ptrts. tnd auppli•,. Pi•~ ~.
up and deliwr;, D•Vi•
Cietner. one half ·mile .___..~
Goo-C-Ad. CtK tJI"'~·,.
"8·0294.
; ... :.~·

eondHion. 304-175-4384.

-

phone 304· t75· 1315.

33 tc,..: 3 mil• wett of HMC .
nw routt 3tli . Ctll t14-441·
8221 '"" • .

Aogert

topper , running botrdl
t20QO.OO Ctlll14-441-3834.

&amp;14-441·1221 .

furnlthild ept, t&lt;kltt1,
ttftrtnctl . Point Plttttnl.

1·614-237·0488, dey or night.• ·
Bttemtnt :1!·

•••eo.
P.W. and Door Loeb, u:cti1Mtt

175-2870 .. 171-1824 "'"
1t74 Chowy Ch.,onno Pldi·Up,
5:00.
P8, PB, AC. Ill. ltd wMh

SmtM

Acreage

19B1 Chevrolet Mtllbu Cltule

8082.

21B5.

•a

1979 Old1 Cutlatt. 1177 Pinto, .
19718ronco. Callllfttr &amp; p.m., Unoondldonll lit..lme gutrllkj
.... Local ret•tnO.. fumitlfH. ::
304-875·1331.
Frtt "tlmtttt. Cell collect ,t ,

1953 Ford Tractor. Good run. '1971 Mut~tng 1.0 lit• enotne,
ning coMihion. Whh plow• and eood cond. 304-175·1180,
elite. 12000. Cell 114· 992· 1:00-11:00 eft., 1 :00 ell 304-

corn. Call for ltt"t quOMt. Aivtr
City F•rm Supply, 114-441-

and financial news with Lou
Dobbs. (0:30)
llll-.1 at FOr1Une
II)) Iamay Millet
• (l) M'A'I'H
7:05 (l)lanh!"lllftd Ban
7:30aCD 00 N4wlrwed Game
(J) NHL Hcickay

.

·1
I. -J..._J..-J..-.1. -.J.-.J

reports on world economics

8.\SEMENT
WATERPROOFIN&lt;l

.

~======-~ remember, K's me
DO GL OY 'phone- ring."

NaweHaw (1 :00)
ill) Newt
IIJ Monayflnt Curren!

Home
Improvements

742-2372.

304-875-7432.

tiler S:OO. 304-875-1872.

8t

mH•.

Tobacco poundag• 19141b. ~o
eantt • pound. Ph . 11•·2.t5·

Pup Trtllor. 24ft, StttCfeft
Compor .....,, e. tully oqulpod

81

.

Young woman: "Don't can
tonight. You called mllourtlmaJ
last night." Boyfriend: "Okay, but

,.

Dill Paapfl'l Coull
til liD MICNall/ Lehrer

1979 Trent. Am. T·top, A·1
condition, 57,000
white
with bluelnt.rtor. t3100. Ptlc.
negatiable, must lllfl. C.ll 814-

wagon. A/ C. AM-FM

•

(J) SponaCenttr (L)
(i) fnttrllllntilenl Tonight

St' I VII.I'S

7573.

Dodgt Ttucll 10,000 actual
miiM, runt good CaM 114·388-

Prom drtu nntr been worn 1b:11

APARTMENTS. mobllt Mtmn.
hOUM• . Pt. P11111nt tnd O.llipo-

mower. Ntw Ho41tnd Stier.
M111 Far Atikt • wagon.
Runntnu '"t3910. Ph. 114-

'Fe 8tw-8uett. Montgomery
W.-d waod tplhw 111111 new.

01- Log Trucll. 0 -Modtl Pr•

SPAINO SPECIAL! lmmtdlott
depoth to queNflld appllctntl
for occupeney before Mty 1,
1987. For completety cerptttd,
2 b.droom tptt., r•nge 1nd
refrlg•atOt'. pt. . .nt eunound·
ingt with pltry are1. cell 304882· 3718 bttwHn 10:00 tm
and 9 :00 pm. EHO.

800 Ford tractOf' with tr•tt

t1.&amp;00.00 or b.t off•. Call
of llltntl• 4 yn old, 2,000 lbt, 304-171-7111.
phone 304-8911-3411.
2 regltMrtd Jtrll'ft, 304·5715· 1178 OMC - · 0 - It,
71.000 mH"'
very nlc:o.
2080 tfltr 1:00 PM .
IOIId, 304-171-182t or e75·
3131.
64 Hay 8t Grain
73 Vans 8t 4 W.O.

Knuctdtboom Lotd• with
304-837 -2681 , 304- 41B - nUce
ctb • power '-lnii · Dittel .
, 813. or 304-411-1887.
Mounted on Tendom Ford 11ft.

3-4 Colll14·387·0331 .

"~
"
:.....;.,-..,
· 1 ~l~
'
~I I I. I
T AL EV .

a (J) PM lllagulna

1171 Monte C.,lo. Front end
dtmtDed. S..llng partt, tnalne
Mdlttntmllllon . C.HI14-tl2-

pure bloodtd, tiSO.OO. 304·

month. Co11114;812-1713.

occ:uptncy l.tuttltnd •pts ..
Ototgt St., New Htvtn, W. Va.
We •a offering t frH HCUrlty

Ho,.. 81dgo. 814-332-9745.

Ctlll14-882-7215.

Quollty Rottwoll• puppiM.

4211.

"PPettk: cllltm stttt epprovl'd,
pl..tlc eeptic ttnkl. plastic
cufvtrlt. met:ll cut¥trtt. RON

OreckJus living. 1 and 2 Metroom tptrtm ...tt •• Vlll19e
Mtnor end Rivtnide Aptrt·
mtntt it1 Middleport . From
1215. Including utllitltt, Ctll

114-448-7920.

Door. •&amp;333 Erected. Iron

63

Uaed Whlrtpool w••h• tnd
drytr, 1150.00. Call 304·178·

Ctlll14-211 -1211.

1'11. 114-441-2183.

AKe Aegist•rtd Dtch1hund
pu~esal.a. 1 malaP.klnttePh .

1972 Iuick, new lrtnt. See at
UIHky Bldg. Spl: 30'•40'x9', 701
four'lh Avenue; Apt. 5.
10k8 Ovlfhtlld door. Strvice

Pltno for 11lel ResponUW.p•rtv
wtnled to lltumtiiMimonthly
plymtfltt on plano. Sttloc .. y.
Cell credh msneoa; 1·800·447·

114-448-1148.

Unfumlthed 1 BR. apt; llltt new
thru out. He• furnilhed. 111.
floor priYitt, quilt t281mo. Ph.

114-41-4107 .. 441-2102.

Dragonwynd Cettary Ktnntl .
CFA Himllflytn. Pertitn Hd
91tmett klttent. AKC Chow
puppl". Chow pupploo.
Ctlll14-441·3844 lfl1r 7PM.

304-171-1310.

For lilt good uHd fiOOf model
tnd porttbte color TV't Ph.

SpHIOUI 2bdr. tpt . , c.A., wetlf
paid. N..r Pl:ua Hut , Gtlipolll.

""· e14-441-7021.

··•' .. , ··• I

171-8051.
11
hp,
t4,910.00.
OPEN
.Whko
171-4248.
HOUSI!, April 10 end 11. Big 72 TNcks for Sale
AKC Chtmpion-Sired Yorkshire Dfsc:ounlonfiiiOhln.-y. 11M'ooH
_._ Sidon E...,.._., Hond- .
Tttrllf, ftmlle, 7 months old.
II Ford F-210. 4000 miM.
erwn, W. Va. 304-175·7421 .
IICflflce 1t 1300. Ctll304·875P-vDff. 51 lntemtttontl, 70
7471 .
tnttrntttontl 1 ton. t700 01
oHtr. Ctiii14·381·18Z2.
62 Wanted to Buy
67
Musical
1985 Ford Atna•. 15 IJ)d ., in
Instruments
very good cond. Attuml 1oM.
Now buyH\0 thtU corn or •• Co11114-281-UI7.

441·7388.

aa

~

(JJ'Inllell till P0A Tour (R)
Ill ' D (I) AIC Newt !;I
til Nfglllfy Bulllntll RlpQ!t
illl • liZ CIIS II]) NeWIOII'I Apple (0:30) C
11J llltowlll TOclly News ol
•lhe entertainment world Is
anchored live from New
York . (0:30)
II)) WKRP 1ft CfnclnNiti
• (l) Hogan'• Heroao
8:36 (I) Andy Qnfftlh
7:00 CD HI!Ciclafll and
McColmlclt

Galllpollo. Ohio con 114-44112783.

AKC Rt9itttrd Slb8t'IM1 Huaki". Blue eye~, ailuttt mtle It
femtle t100 Itch. Ph. 114-

STOP-LOOK-SAVE

814-812-1434 or 304-8822518.

Commttcltl bulldlngt tor lttlt.
Downtown Pt. PltHant. Stortt,
offices. A-Ont AlAI Ettl'le.
Ctrol Yteglf, lrok•. C•lt 304-

36 Lots

King lr1m1 tiO. Oooct selectln
. of btdroam sult11, metal Clblnttl. ht8dboerdl t30 tnd up
Utld Furniture: woOd teblt &amp; 2
benchN, btdl. It df"Hr, 3
mH11 out Bultvllle Ad. Open
9AM to IPM, Mon . t.hru Stt.

5 room unfurnlthtd 1pt. Ctll

Rtndy Erwin 1501 -281-3911.

Profeaaional
Services

Drttltfl •st. Gun cabinets 8,
10!..12gun. GIIOftiKtricrtngl

to

New tptrtment : completely

2809.

· 23

King 1310. 4 drtwtr c:h•t til.

Opportunity .

Mature Chrlttlln mtn, Oroundt,
liMPing, hMdymM. tnd lawn·

304-871-481 ,,

•a3.

f73. lnd 183. Outtntett t22&amp;.

t115 0
•
· 0 tnd up. 304-441·

1887

•rlngelttnlna limo, ntttlhtlpl 304-171-2118.

Hutchn •400 tnd up. Bunk
bedl complete w· mltlr"'"
•296 tnd up to t3915. Baby bed1
•1106t1?8. Mtttr..... orboll
springl full or twin
firm.

Mobile hom" lor rtnt lttrtlnn

ve•

In ,.,., homo. Will• 185-385e.
providt mtlltlf necnury. Han .,...,---,---,.:-:-:-:-::--::
reltrtnCH. Ph. 114·n8-8114. Prl cerlfC
td td,139100
.
·00
• 3
Hdroom, l•a• kitchen tnd
Attention home owntrl IU Uvfngroom, Jerry• Run Aotd,

f795 . Dttk f100 up IO t378.

2 btdroom· lralltr, coupiH, 1
•mill chUd. Loc:uat Ad., At . 1,
Point ~l...ent, 304-871-1078.

o4d houtt, 5
btth. ttttltldlng, 2 .-.,;ti,~j,,oi!
Utrlgl, 1'h lct'H
outbulldingt, 1 milt
Tombineon Run· Rold.

1B Wanted to Do

21

2 bedroom trtiltr fOf rent In
9
yrtcuM. Mutt •pply In, perton.
.
814 . 192. 2128 .

•

•m J•~~Man•
8:05 (I) hvttty Hlllbllllta
8:30 e (J) 1111 NBC Nlghlly Newt

o.

LAYNE'S fURNITURE

to 15915. Aedlntn t2211 to
t37S. Limps &amp;28 to t121.
Din1t111 t1ot tnd up to t491.
Wood ttble w -1 chair• t281 to

low to form four simple wOf'ds .

II)) Fat;11 of Lifo

Concrete blodlt en tizes ytrd or
dllivtry. M11on send. GIIUpoll•
Block Co.. 123% Pine St.,

up ro ,, 25. Hkl••-i&gt;td• 0390

of the

lour scrambled wo rds be-

llll Sacral City

..

Croot Mottl.' 814-448-7398.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rant

O Rtorrangt ·· l,ntrs

(J) Spotlsl.ook (T)
til Square One TV

Block. brick , uw• plptt, .Win·
dowe, llnttlt. etc. Cltuda Win•••· A~ Orendt.
C•tl 114-

245-5121.

lilT DAILY
PIUUI

EVENING

lblt letter ,l~n. t211. 00. Fret
dtlivtry. Fr" · letttrt. AAA

chthl
priced
Yirglnla't Ptraontl Ctte Homtl~;~~~~;;;:;.~j";;;:;;:;;;::;:::::::1 Sof11
•395 totnd
&amp;995.
Ttbtel
150hom
tnd

hu ....... for

WED., 'APRIL 8

..... ..... 40" ••. lighted .......

rlf'lgtt . Sktgg1 Appllanc11,
VPPtr Ai\1., Ad. betide Stone

"It April again, Kemosabe where ntY form 1099?"

Reference~ reqUir~ .

of OllllpoHt Dtl.,_

Good\

13

. · POfTlii'Oy·. Middleport. Ohio

8, 1987

~::Jrlll

P"'' """*

H

U WJ ' L

H

G C Z L

' c:)wXATJIAJL
LNA

IV B A
E'VLSN
VJU

PVSLZ . - EHDD

G WB A Z

L N. A
TAYWTL
TWOATZ

Yaterday'l Cr,ptoqaote: A GOOD LISTENER IS

NOO ONLY ·POflULAR EVERYWHERE, BUT AFI'ER A
WHILE HE KNOtis SOME11UNG. - WILSON WNI:R

'
... •••.

�.

'
'

~~ 14-The Daily Sentinel .

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

•

•

Wednesday, April

.....

'

.

a. 19~7

By GRETEL WIKLE
Sen. M. Ben Gaeth. fl . p&lt;i yments on purchases of anv
Sen. Richard ' H. Finan, R·
ot h e rwl sl' unabl e IQ
COLUMBUS !UP! l- A bill. to Defia nce. dPscribed 1he moa surr new road eq uipment.
· Cincinna ti. proposed a major
tommunicate.
classify spring-loaded ballistic as a ma tter of " loca l C'O illroi" for
Sponsors said . the legislat ion rewriie of the savings and loan
Legislation of this nature ha~ ·
knives as dangerous and restrict 'the·township trU SII'CS.
would give count irs and town- . rrgulatory law, establishing a
cleared th e Hou se in the past. but
them undt'r the Ohio Weapons · 1\ iso adopted un;•nimouoiY by. shi ps greater flexibili ty in. cash separa te Department of Finan'
has been held up in the Sena ie
Control Law has bel'n sent to the Senate and sent to tho flow management.
cia! !nstlt utions. Such regulation
because of disputes over le~al
Gov . Richard F. Celeste aft er 1he governor wtJ~ ~~ bill permitt i ng
'i€'vera l bills whi ch failed in · currently takes place under the
langO age.
;
House concurred In S&lt;mat e coun ty ('Omm isslonf'rs or l awn - past sess ions were reint roduced Ohio Depar tment of Commerce.
Both the Senate anq HOll'ii'
11111endments . .•
ship tru stees to usP lht' trade In' In thr Sena te.
Similar legislation clea red ihe
adjournro untiii: .JO p.m. todar.:
The House voted 77-12Tuesday val uP of equi pme nt to reduce the
' .
toacceptSenate changesonthe r-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------~----~----r
bill, sponsored by Rep. Thoma'
Potlenger . R-Cinclnnati. Ballis·
tic knives. sometimes associal&lt;'d
Your Independently Owned
with martial arts films. have a
Low-priced Supermarket
dNachable blade propelled by a
spring and can hit a target 90 feet
away, Pottenger said.
The bill makes It Illegal to
carry a concealed ballistic kn ife,
and also outlaws possession of a
ballistic knife by convicted fcl·
ons.. Also. a permit would b&lt;'
needed to buy a ballistic knife .
The House approved a bi1189-0
that would make voting easiN
for residents of Ohio- especially
FRESH LEAN BOILED
' LB
soldiers- out of the country on
Election !lay.
Under the bill , a relative would
"' .
be able to register the absent
voter, and In the case of service
men and women, a dependent
could vote for the absent person .
The bill. which goes on to th~
Senate, makes other changes to
facilitate voter registration for
soldiers and abseniC'e voters .
The Senate passed unanlm·
ously and forwarded to Celeste a
bill permitting boards of town·
· ship trustees to lower the 55 mph
s~ed limit on unimproved high·
ways In unlncorporatNI areas of
a towmlhlp.

-

CINCINNATI iUPf.) - Josc·ph
Huebner says It 's taken him
almost 18 years to gel over th&lt;'
ex&lt;&gt;cutlon-stylc shooting death of
his wife and he was outrag1•d
Wh!'O he learned tht• killer would
be released from prison.
His outcry and that of hundreds
of others In suburban !lei hi Hills
and the tri-state area apparenlly
rC'ached Columbus where lh(•
Ohio Parole Board late Tucsd a~·
reversed It s decision to rch·ase
Raymond Kassow from prison. 1\
board spokesman said the bOard
would recoO"Ider Its decision.
the bOard had r&lt;&gt;celved two
shopplnll balls lull of mall urging
the bOard to den y parole to
Kassow, onl' of three men r on·
vlctcd In one of the worst killings
In the area.
Heubn£'r's wif&lt;:' and t hrec or h&lt;:&gt;r
women were herded Into a bank
vault Sept. 24, 1969, and shot.
A board spokesman said the
public outcry aft er Tuesda y
morning's derision was a rea so n
for reconsideration.
Hamilton County Prosecut or
Art Ncy said he Is "absolut e ! ~·
..,outral(••d" at the dN'Islon by th~
l'loard to r~lease Kassow . who
has been IQprlson about 17 years.
KaS'soW"'lad been sch·edull'd to br
releasro June 2, If th&lt;• Kentucky
parol~ authorities would approve
his !lOin~ to live with his sister in
Corbin. Ky.
Ney had ur~ ed the public to
write to the bOard asking that II
'Ill deny the parole.
Huebner sat In his car whi!P his
wlfr Helen had ~one Into th"
[)elhl Hills bank to rash a rhr rk.
Shl' had walked In on the robbl'ry
and was herded with the teller
and two other customers into the
bank vault where thry were shot.
Huebner saw tltl' three robbl'rs
run from the bank carrying his
wife's purse and he ran In, ani)' to
find I he four oodles stu rkro In Ihr
vault.
Hurbner said hE had 11 hard
time bclievln~ the boa rd had
opted for parole.
" I ran not believe that this guy
was released for committing this
hlenous crime." Huebner said .
He still remembers the bloody
scPnl' he found, his wife's. body
crouched In a corner uppar~nll y
where she had Cl'awl~d to try to
escape the gunfire.
"I saw four victims, lnrludln~
mv wife, piled In a 1·auit," he
said. " It's takl'n m!' nearly 1R
years to get over this."

TENDERBEST

WHOLE

Hams
$1 59

.

,:·
..

'·

LB.

·Sliced
Bacon

1 LB.

111

R. C.

•

·2 LITER
BOTTLE ' :

Cola
\

.....

GOLDEN

Ripe
Bananas

II.

U.S. NO. 1

WHITE POTATOES .............~.~.~;.~.t.. .... $249
•ASST. COLORS

Cottone lie

Bath

Tissue

.

~~~~--------~------~~
New
Plastic Bottle
G. E.
::..·~.
Soft White ~:
10W30-10W40'

'~
~

Light Bulbs

Valvoline
Motor Oil

3
'

4 PAK
PkG.

$)991.
:;.:.} .-~

~.

'"

-

:...

•Priectl Good thru Sat.. April 11, 1'987. • Not R..ponlible For Typographical Errors

HOMEBEST

Bleach

69~Al.
(

.

'

Tide
Detergent

4~~~$.

16

COMPUTIF:RIIZED ALIGNMENT -Jim ~- LL ·
owner of Jim Cobh Chevrolet·Oidsmohlle·
Cadillac, at left, and co-service managers Tom
Kerns and Dave Pearson, review th•• new

computerized
lgnmeilt system
which was Installed this we••k at the Pomeroy
dealership. The state-of.lhe-art system Is de·
signed to offer better service ~Yith a higher dcgrc~
of accu

Senate President Paul E . Gil·
SIMPLE PROCEDURE - Tom Kerns, front,
hydraulic lift which Ia part,of,a new computerized
lmor. R-Port Clinton, "hopefully
and
Dave
Pearson,
co-service
managers,
and
Jim
wheel alignment system,. Installed this week.
it (th e budget) will be out of here
Cohh,.
center,
of
Jim
Cobb
Chevrolet·Oidsmohlle·
Vehicles
are pulled onto too rack, and a computer
well before June 30." Senate and
Cadillac, Pomeroy, discuss aspects ol the
major alignment angiCII - ciiSter,
reads
three
House negotiations may be re·
camber
and
l'oe.
ql!i.red on the differences In late
June.
'
Majority House Demot'rats,
whO rewrote !hi' governor's offering of last February, said Wed·
nesday the annual spending
Jim Cobb Chev r ole t Informa tio n on th ~ compuf l'f tu r ned on, Its computer does an
hikes of 1.8 percent fo r fl scall988
Oidsmoblle·Cadlllac
of
Pomeroy
screen
guides personnel ste p by electronic system tes t. The sel f·
and 5 percent for 1989 were
entered
the
computerized
world
th
rough
th e alignment pro- tes t display automatica lly ap·
step
achieved without Increasing ma·
of
wheel
alignment
th
is
week.
cess.
Prompting
messages' tell pears If a problem exist s. Cobb
jor taxes .
with'
the
$30,000
purchase
of
a
what
to
do
now
and
wh at to do says th e sytem has been built to
House Republicans found little
Hunte
r
.Dlll
sys
tem
for
wheel
next.
and
If
a
customer
des ires, a las t and Is easy to mai ntain an&lt;l
fault with the the massive
,
manufactured
by
the
alignment
pr int-out of th e inspection dat a updal ~ .
spending outlay during the one
'
Hunte
r
Engineering
Co.
ca
n be given as proof of 1he stat us
Cobb's co-service rnanagcrs,
hour and 10 mlnu.tes of debate.
Cobb
call
s
th
e
lllll
the
mos
t
the
vehicle.
of
nave
Pearson and Tom Kerns,
except to say they preferred
advanced
alignment
system
ever
Cobb
says
thr
new
syste
m
have been trained by Hunter
more money for primary and
secondary education. They d rv~ loped . The system features makes alig nment as easy ;,s servtce re prl'se nt at lves , and are
praised Its austerity and said It a 19-lnch color screen. sperlflea · 1 · 2 · ~ . and Is almost like havi ng an rea dy to provide eo mputl'rlzed
was "a much better budget than lion memory for 95 perccnt of the alignment Instructor In the ~ h op . whc I· alignment for all thei r
And each time the 0111 Is customers.
the one presented by the vehicles on the road toady, plus
space
for
7fi
operator
entries.
governor."
In addition to thl'se features
A dozen Republicans joined 57
and
others, the system has a
Democrats In pushing the budget
remotl' which allows
wireless
over to the Senate, where hear·
.....
ro con.Irol the
service
personnel
logs will begin following next
system from anywhere In the
week's spring recess.
alignment bay.

Local .dealer

Court denies

4 ROLl '
PKG.

·-•
-&lt;'

-'
•

.-'•.
•'·

..
.
.'..

.••

·;:

f

An appeal Ia the Fourth Dis·
trict Court of Appeals has been
denied . In the Meigs County
( ammon Pl~ s Court rase of
Francis H. ndrew against' Ihe
Olive Towns p Board of Trustees. el al.
The Meigs County rase, a
taxpayer action. was filed by
Andrew, on behalf of the resl·
dents of Olive Township, on Jan.
18, 1985.
Andrew charged that the Aug.
1, 1984 appointment of Donald
Bennett, as a successor trustee of
Olive Township, was Invalid
because Trustees Chesler Wells
and Everett Schultz violated the
sunshlne law ln making the
appointment of Bennett. Andrew
asked that Bennett's appoint·
ment be declared Invalid by the
court. and for attorney fees .
Bennett's appointment was
declared J,nvalklilY Judge Knight
on Nov. 1, 19115, and Andrew was
awaj'ded $1,~ In costs.
Knight's decision that the

'

appe~l

by
Meigs man
.

appointment of Bennett wass
Invalid was not at Issue In the
appeal.
Andrew fllro the appeal,
charging that . the trial court
erred by falling to find defend·
ants Chester Wells and Everett
Schultz personally liable to Olive
Township re~Idents for the sa·
lary of 15,100 paid to Bennett
during the months Augusi191W to
October 1985 when he acted as
trustee, Andrew charged that
payment to Bennett was . an
h)1proper expendllure by the
trustees.
Defendants In the action,.
Wells, · Schultz and Bennett,cross-appealed, charging that
the trial court was without
authority to order that attorney
fees be paid to Andrew.
The appelate court rejectro
AndreW's appeal on grounds that
Bennett was a "de facto" officer,
meaning that although not a
trustee In point oflaw, he thought
he was a trustee and was

4 Sections, 34 Pages

'

acceptro as such by Indiv iduals
whb dealt with him during )he
period of time In question, and he
did render service to the
township.
The appelate court dismissed
the cross-appeal from the defend·
ants because they voluntarily
paid the costs to Andrew at the
time the trial court ordered
payment.
Appelate Judge Lawrence
Grey disagreed that the cross·
appeal should have been dis·
misSed, stating that he would not ,
on Ohio constllullonal grounds,
dismiss that Issue.
Appelale Judges Homer Abele
and Earl Stephenson did concur
however. creating the majorit y
necessary for dismissal for the
, cross-appeal.
.
Andrew was representro by
Pomeroy attorney Steven Story
and the defendants were repres·
entro by Prosecuting Attorney
Frederick W. Crow III.

ad~s

alignment system

•• • •

,

UP, UP AND AWAY - Nearly 350 brightly
colored balloo1111 ROlled off Into the wild blue
yonder In a launch Wednesday afternoon ai the
Pomeroy Elementary School. The PQ.meroy
youngaler$ gathered on the fronl lawn of the
school for the balloon launch, the fund drive
klckoll for the proposed Roherl B. Morris

By Nt\NCY YOACHAM . ;
Sentinel Stafl Writer
· It Is theconcensusofthcMel!(s
-County Commissioners that due
to rate Increases affecting a(l
county medical Insurance poll·
cles, they should give serious
consideration to bidding !Of
Insurance coverage.
Rates for. county's Department
of Human Services and highway
department are Increasing J
percent. 1 Coverage for cou•t;
house employees Is Increasing 25
percent, the commissioners r&amp;
portro In Wednesday's meeting;
County workers are Insured by
Blue Cross of Central Ohio.
:
Meeting with the eommlssloners yesterday to discuss the raiSe
In rates were /\ian Gorlewskl and
Toin Starr, of Blue Cross. Go,
rlewskl explained that rate I~·
creases are based on past claim
experience. He said the court;
house group's claim experience:
exceeds the average experience
expertro In u small group of that
size. which Includes about 80
members.
Commissioner Richard Jones
laid Gorlewskl that II was his
understanding the county had
been due a rate reduction last
your, but then did not receive the
reduction . Gorlewskl said he
would review the county's records to determine II this Is
correct.
"
Billing problems with the com·
pany were also brought up by
Commissioner Richard .Jones.
.Jones told Gorlewskl that He
received calfs In February from
county employees covert'&lt;! by
Blue Cross . telling him that the
company was refusln~t to . pay
their bills because the county had
not paid Its January bill. Upon
checking Into the s ltuatlon, Jones
discovered that the county had
never received a January bill.
Jones said he contacted the
company and .as a result, the
.January and February bills were
hand-delivered !rom Columbus.
.Jones said he did not think II was
fair !hal the Individuals who
were covrred under the county's
Blue Cross policies were put In
this situation, nor that comments
were made tha.t the county hadn't
paid the bill, when In fact , the
billing problems were the fault of
the company .
Go rlewskl and Starr apologIzed for any Inconvenience and
embarrassment ,Yhlch may have
been causro by the billing""
mlx·up, and offered to personally,
contat·t those Individuals under
the policy who experienced dlffl·
!Continued on Page 8i

•

IJbrary·Medla Center. Each of the
carried a tag with the name of utudent ukln&amp;lor ,
community aupport In the form of donatlo1111. ,
Donations may be mailed to the Pomeroy ·
Elementary School, 260 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy,. ·
Ohio 45'769.

•

. ..,r

26 Cenls

Officials .
consider
coverage.:
bidding.i~

.

COLUMBUS (UPli - A $2'2 .1
billion two-year state budget
with no major lax hikes and
minimal spending increases has
landed in the laps of stal e
senators and will tie studied anew
for the next two months.
The Hou se P.assro the 1988-89
spending blueprint Wednesday
on a bipartisan 69-27 votr and
shipped II to the Republican·
dominated Sena te .
Se nate GOP leaders already
have Indicated they will make
spending changes within the
fram ework of the House-passed
bill. bur will not Increase rc·
venues. In fact. they will be
under heavy pressure to eliml·
nat e a tax on long distance
telephone calls, which House
Republican s said would hurt
bus inesses.
Tj1e adm inistration of Gov.
Richard F. Celeste expressed
satisfaction with the way the
House treated Its budget recom·
mendatlons. which contain the
smallt&gt;st Increases in state
spending In 24 years.
The new fiscal period begins
July 1. " If .all goes well," said

GAL

biET RITE,
CHERRY ·RC

Clear tonight, with a low
near 35. Mostly sunny Friday,
with highs · 11ear 70. The ·
probability ol precipitation' is
near zero through . Friday.
Winds will be llghl and south·
erly tonight.

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Ohio Senate gets
$22 billion budget

PREMIUM FOODLAND ICE

COTTAGE

9. 1987

PKG.

Viva
Ice
Milk
FOODLAND

.
enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, April

will continue.
By NANCY YOACHAM
Roberts said Meigs County
Sent1nel Stall Writer
A tentative union contract was Highway workers are now some·
accept ed Monday by employees where In !he middle in compari·
of the Meigs County Highway son towages,pald by or her county
highway departments in the
DE"pa rt men t.
Meigs County Engineer Phil . state. "Some are higher," he
Roberts reported Wednesday to · said, "and some are lowet: "
At present, the highway de·
the Meigs County Commission·
ers tha t the union and the partmenl' s budget · Includes
_highway department's :l3 em· $10(;,812.20 for shop labor,
ployees have agreed upon and $370.122.89 for road labOr and
accepted the tentative contract. $82;155.54 for four non-union
Roberts said the employees administrative positions . The
v&lt;&gt;ted on the contract Monday total for office personnel does not
Include the engineer's yearly ·
aflernoon.
E ffective lor one year fro m salary of $32,645.02.
These figures are basro upon
Apr il 1 to midnight March 31.
the
department's 1986 budgetary
1988. the contra ct ralls for a 15
and include possible
figures
cent s-per-hour raise. and a $3
per-man per-month Increase In overtime payments.
The union Is now hf rhe process
t(te uni on's health and welfare
program, from $28 to $31 per of typing the tenatlve contract ,
month . According to Roberts , Raberts reported. Once In final
these figures reflect an overall form . the contract will be re·
viewed by Roberts, Ted Warner,
increase Of 1.8 percent .
The last highway department highway superintendent, and
contract was for two years and David Spencer, office manager.
gave employees a oo· cents Alter the review, which could
per -hounalse the first year and take place next week, according
60 cents per-hour raise the to Roberts, the agreement will
have to be ratlflro by the Meigs
second year. ·
County
Commissioners . '
Including benefits, the new
This year's contract , which
contract ·will give workers a
starting salary of $7.35 per hour. was to have expired midnight
The highest operator's salary at March 31. was extended to April
the deparment will be $8.30 per 27 by the union when meetings
hour, Roberts said . The policy of with a federal mediator could not
an 'additional 15 cerlts per hpur be scheduled before the explra· •
' for five years or more longe(.lfy lion date. '

SAVORY

LB.

Suwr Lo11o
9-4I.:J4-7-1843

new. contract

$ 49

Roast

IUNitlt))

Sl 99 :~:

CHOICE

Chuck

TAVERN

South Central Ohio
Clear lonl~tht, :ovlth a low
between 30 and .l5. Sunny Thurs·
day. with highs between 60 and

•·

U~DA

Boneless

Ohio weather

The probability of prPClplla·
t ion Is near zero through
Thursday.
Winds will be light and north·
erly today and light and variable
ronlght.
.
Oldo Extended Forecast
FrY8r tbrouJh Sunday
Fair Friday, with a chance of
rain Saturday and Sunday. Highs
wUI ra""fromthelow tot he mid
601 eech day, with overnight lows
rlftlllll from upper 30s to the
middle 401.
''

.

4623

Highway unit
sJaff accept

..

Outcry
.clouds
parole

PICK-4

at y

Vo1 . 36, No.237
Copyrighted 1987

FoooLAND

Cooked Hom ••••• ~

Daily Numlwr
691

'

EASTMAN'S...

Pre-Easter Savings

Ohio Lottery

Reds remain
unbeaten .in ·
two starts ·
-~age 3

J•

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